I want to address briefly another aspect of the COVID-19 crisis as it impacts especially vulnerable populations. Population I have in mind here are indigenous people, Native Americans in the United States. Many Native Americans are part of existing tribes and many live on reservations, established reservations, particularly in the west and the southwest of the United States. To make a very long story short, we have as a matter of American constitutional and statutory history, quite a lot of prerogatives and protections, you might even call it sovereignty. It is given to these reservations to establish their own rules and regulations, and to have some amount of immunity from the imposition of federal and state and even local laws. Now, that immunity is not comprehensive, and it's simply not the case that tribal sovereignty means that individual citizens who are part of those reservations are completely separate from American law. Doesn't mean that at all. But at the same time, there are special challenges and special predicaments that are raised by efforts and attempts on the part of federal, and state and local authorities to impose significant restrictions, even in the context of a pandemic like this, on individuals who live on those reservations. This is a particular salience with respect to lockdowns on shelter and place orders. But it is likely to persist as a problem or a predicament going forward as we move toward more widespread testing and especially tracing of individuals who work with and socialized throughout these particular reservations. So by no means giving any clear answers to how those issues will be dealt with by courts and by authorities, I simply note that there are some unique challenges, and that we as a society have to be quite intentional and deliberate about how we navigate and negotiate this regulatory regime while at the same time protecting our traditions of tribal sovereignty. Outside the context of reservations, there are the more general issues that I talked about in some detail on another video, and that is since indigenous peoples in the United States are disproportionately poor relative to the general population. disproportionately have preexisting health conditions, again, relative to the general population, they face the special disadvantages that they have with respect to contracting COVID-19, and also suffering disproportionately health effects. So once again, we need as folks in the legal system and political system, to be quite intentional and deliberate about how we deal with those particular public health and economic consequences. That will be a challenge going forward, especially as we see a number of hotspots that have emerged in communities of color, but in particular communities in which a large number of indigenous people reside.