so that's what we're doing so profesr haimovitz,vi let's return to your scholarship. yeah.t f around world war two with immigration and lor. yeah. is it is there a sense that everything oldimmigration and l? kind of, yeah. i would say. in fact, i'm giving a talk in a couple of hours labor in the 19th century. so what was called the coolie trade workers mostly from asia being hired on contracts to wore british empire and then beyond. so i'm looking indentured labor, but also imgrant labor in t us in the present people who come on temporarytrsimilar to ts and it's the parallels are absolutely remarkable down to contracts. you know, if a worker is gone te employer has to notify authorities it's it's it's a continuum it's it's really not that different so we're immigrant workers have been historically vulnerable they're still vulnerable in so many ways the people i write about are on visas. they're there's they're not they are they're not people who migrated authorization. they have authorizationâ– #euo be here, but they still get by their employers. not all of them, of course, e