But then I thought and I said, well, since you told me I was going to die and you've given me a terminal diagnosis, president Trump signed the right to try act, and I would like the right to try remdesivir and budesonine. You know, they give that Not amazing. And I'm sorry. Ivermectin. Yeah. Ivermectin and budesonine. And, he was like, no. They immediately hooked me up on that. It didn't again, no informed consent. And, they also put me on, you know, another regimen of vitamins. I was not given a, I I didn't have budesonide while I was in there either, and then, I didn't have Albirell either. I know. But, you know, I I would buy that from, you know, in 2020, you know, the first few months, but but but by December of 2020, they absolutely knew remdesivir was killed. And, actually, James O'Keefe Keith, there was a memo in that was leaked from the DOD that con he that was sent to congress. They had an entire hearing on it, and the memo showed that they knew in April of 2020 that, ivermectin, hydroxychloroquine, and budesonide saved lives and that there was a really high cure rate or, treatment rate effective rate for those medications, and they suppressed the information. The NIH suppressed the information. And she did bring up ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, and they said that was not gonna happen. And whatever else medicine she was talking about, I don't know if it was budesonine or whatever. You know, I don't know anything about that medicaid, all that stuff, but he said, no way. It's too damn expensive. She asked him 3 times, and he said no. They never offered him, like, budesonine or breathing treatment, ivermectin, kind of basic things that just went, to an experimental drug remdesivir. Probably didn't give him the side effects or give him informed consent. I'm my guess. Oh, they they put in here that the doctor saw him by iPad and a nurse was in the room and explained to him the repercussions and that he understood. But that's what they kept saying. They said that there was a nurse as a witness that he agreed to everything. But, again, my whole thing is how can someone be sepsis and critical and be making these decisions for himself? Why was it why didn't anyone call me? No 1 called me. And then it was, what about the budesonide? No. I can't do that because, they, you know, they just they they didn't want to do it. They didn't want to do the Sure. It's so much fentanonprocopol. I just it's just so much of it. And they back up a little bit. Every time we ask for a certain type of medication that we'd heard work for somebody, more than once, the answer was always, it is not the protocol. We were cons wait. If if we were told that once, 25 times. They have a group of doctors that gather every week, and they make the decision of what works, what doesn't work, and what they're going to allow. And anything we ask for, it was not protocol. Now saying that, the last couple of weeks, there were some antibiotics we set. We asked for