I appreciate that.
My last question is very brief, and it's to do with the actual footprint. There have been a couple of statements made, you know, about so many square kilometres, hundreds of square kilometres, thousands of square kilometres, of land being forcefully vacated—you know, forcing the people off this land—because of mining or business interests. I've been around a lot of mines across Canada and in parts of the rest of the world, and the footprint when you're doing exploration.... And you'd be familiar with this, I would expect. You may explore 100 kilometres of property, but you don't build roads over it, and you don't force people off it, and you don't get in property conflicts in every square inch of it.
Quite frankly, it's the opposite of that. You explore a large area and you develop a very tiny—often only hundreds of acres--footprint. I don't understand how you force....
In the Highland Clearances, people were forcefully expelled from their property. But that's not the case here. There's no reason to do that. So I don't understand how this occurs. If there's narco traffic, if there's illegal criminal activity, if there's something else that people are fleeing for their own personal safety, yes, that I understand.