If I may add to that, sir--we only had this up on the wall for about 30 seconds--in the IMIM and in the national use-of-force framework, the most important portion is officer presence. It's right in the middle. People tend to go to the outside, to the lethal force side, to the impact weapons and that type of thing. The most important part is that inside part: officer presence. I may go into a situation, or my colleague, Troy, may go into a situation and look at it in terms of officer presence. With our presence, the situation might be completely defused or it could go through the roof.
That whole IMIM is not linear thinking. In order to get to here, you don't have to go there. It's a concept. It's an ideal of how you interact. And things can change with something as subtle as whether you're wearing a patrol jacket or a storm coat, because your whole ability to respond changes 100% because of that. So it's not as simple as having a model.
Going back to your question, sir, it's the training in how you use that when you get into a certain situation.