and russellville, alabama. remember that one, right? these are the same people who are actively recruited by alabama's industries. right there to sort of keep mucho bravo, russellville. always in your mind. so that's sort of what in the 20 tens. north carolina tries to pass a version of this of their own. mississippi tries and fails as a result of activism by. both black and latino legislators and community activists. alabama one. georgia passes one. that's pretty famous because it also prevents students from undocumented, from attending the top five public universities in georgia which is complicated. it's not complicated. it's bad. it's you know, it was it was because they also have this whole like hope scholarship thing. where is here from? georgia. i can't remember. no, we're more north carolina class. okay. anyway, we can go. we circle on that later. so at the same time that there's this spike in anti-immigrant legislation, the latino communities that had been forming all this time were also pushing back against this. and they were