david aster was happy with all his journalists in effect, rather than speaking truth to power or whatever the free as they were. they were. i think he was sent over for the next for, i'm not an expert. and david, as to i, my sense is that he was a bit naive. it was pretty naive actually. and there was a genuine sense that fill be had been done wrong that he'd been, he'd had a raw deal. he'd been accused of being a russian spy and the government in the end, the british government, in 1955, had cleared him. and his friends said, well, we told you we told you is not a russian spy. we've got to look after this guy. he's good guy, he's straightforward and so we've got to find him a job. so they, as you say, they found him a job with the observer and the economist, and they sent him off to be route. i mean, well, since you were at the evening standard, i have to ask this because christopher steele, the discredited m. i. 6 agent, interviewed recently with great fanfare, saying, boris johnson made the son of the owner of the standard. now he doesn't understand that actually the russian guinea lev