get themselves baptized as good public servants that didn't speak up in the moment of time in this. specifically debra birx who was aware and didn't say something. it's not only people that made direct decisions that endangered the public. it's the people that were standing by that didn't open their mouths in the midst of this. i want to add on to something that ed just said, i think that fundamental problem we have is that we have a large segment of society and leadership that no longer believes in the common good. they no longer believe the common good is a paramont virtue or value we should strive for. when you are in a public health crisis like a pandemic, at a time when people are exhausted by it, i don't think we can underestimate the number of people. even the people supportive by joyed are exhausted at this we're almost at two years of the pandemic come march. part of it is holding people accountable for direct decisions they made, but the other part is we have to have a civics lesson again in why we were founded,