we spoke to one of the adoptees kimberly mckee, i think for me like many adoptees and other folks who are affected by what the political situation in south korea. we are thinking about this, the lives and the future that were lost in terms of those who are adopted out from korea to not only north america, but also europe and australia. sometimes it's too easy to consider sort of adoptees, myriad of emotions and feelings around being sent for adoption as angry. rather, i think it's a little bit more complex because so often we don't talk about the need for family preservation and the reasons fueling the relinquishment for adopting which included economic prosperity and lack of social welfare support. and so what you're seeing now with the adult adopted community, both in korea as well as a broad, as a greater effort to both support unwed mothers as well as change sort of brought her narratives around why children were placed for adoption. so when thinking about international adoption at that time period, korean children were the largest export and that was really reliant on sort of the