The Barbarians at the Gates of Paris
Theodore Dalrymple
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Everyone knows la douce France: the France
of wonderful food and wine, beautiful landscapes, splendid châteaux and
cathedrals. More tourists (60 million a year) visit France than any country in
the world by far. Indeed, the Germans have a saying, not altogether reassuring
for the French: “to live as God in France.” Half a million Britons have bought
second homes there; many of them bore their friends back home with how they
order these things better in France.
But there is another growing, and
much less reassuring, side to France. I go to Paris about four times a year and
thus have a sense of the evolving preoccupations of the French middle classes. A
few years ago it was schools: the much vaunted French educational system was
falling apart; illiteracy was rising; children were leaving school as ignorant
as they entered, and much worse-behaved. For the last couple of years, though,
it has been crime: l’insécurité, les violences urbaines, les incivilités.
Everyone has a tale to tell, and no dinner party is complete without a
horrifying story. Every crime, one senses, means a vote for Le Pen or whoever
replaces him.
I first saw l’insécurité for myself about eight months ago.
It was just off the Boulevard Saint-Germain, in a neighborhood where a tolerably
spacious apartment would cost $1 million. Three youths—Rumanians—were attempting
quite openly to break into a parking meter with large screwdrivers to steal the
coins. It was four o’clock in the afternoon; the sidewalks were crowded, and the
nearby cafés were full. The youths behaved as if they were simply pursuing a
normal and legitimate activity, with nothing to fear.
Eventually, two
women in their sixties told them to stop. The youths, laughing until then,
turned murderously angry, insulted the women, and brandished their screwdrivers.
The women retreated, and the youths resumed their “work.”
A man of about
70 then told them to stop. They berated him still more threateningly, one of
them holding a screwdriver as if to stab him in the stomach. I moved forward to
help the man, but the youths, still shouting abuse and genuinely outraged at
being interrupted in the pursuit of their livelihood, decided to run off. But it
all could have ended very differently.
Several things struck me about the
incident: the youths’ sense of invulnerability in broad daylight; the
indifference to their behavior of large numbers of people who would never dream
of behaving in the same way; that only the elderly tried to do anything about
the situation, though physically least suited to do so. Could it be that only
they had a view of right and wrong clear enough to wish to intervene? That
everyone younger than they thought something like: “Refugees . . . hard life . .
very poor . . . too young to know right from wrong and anyway never taught . .
no choice for them . . . punishment cruel and useless”? The real criminals,
indeed, were the drivers whose coins filled the parking meters: were they not
polluting the world with their cars?
Another motive for inaction was
that, had the youths been arrested, nothing would have happened to them. They
would have been back on the streets within the hour. Who would risk a
screwdriver in the liver to safeguard the parking meters of Paris for an
hour?
The laxisme of the French criminal justice system is now notorious.
Judges often make remarks indicating their sympathy for the criminals they are
trying (based upon the usual generalizations about how society, not the
criminal, is to blame); and the day before I witnessed the scene on the
Boulevard Saint-Germain, 8,000 police had marched to protest the release from
prison on bail of an infamous career armed robber and suspected murderer before
his trial for yet another armed robbery, in the course of which he shot someone
in the head. Out on bail before this trial, he then burgled a house. Surprised
by the police, he and his accomplices shot two of them dead and seriously
wounded a third. He was also under strong suspicion of having committed a
quadruple murder a few days previously, in which a couple who owned a
restaurant, and two of their employees, were shot dead in front of the owners’
nine-year-old daughter.
The left-leaning Libération, one of the two daily
newspapers the French intelligentsia reads, dismissed the marchers, referring
with disdainful sarcaèm to la fièvre flicardiaire—cop fever. The paper would no
doubt have regarded the murder of a single journalist—that is to say, of a full
human being—differently, let alone the murder of two journalists or six; and of
course no one in the newspaper acknowledged that an effective police force is as
vital a guarantee of personal freedom as a free press, and that the thin blue
line that separates man from brutality is exactly that: thin. This is not a
decent thing for an intellectual to say, however true it might be.
It is
the private complaint of everyone, however, that the police have become impotent
to suppress and detect crime. Horror stories abound. A Parisian acquaintance
told me how one recent evening he had seen two criminals attack a car in which a
woman was waiting for her husband. They smashed her side window and tried to
grab her purse, but she resisted. My acquaintance went to her aid and managed to
pin down one of the assailants, the other running off. Fortunately, some police
passed by, but to my acquaintance’s dismay let the assailant go, giving him only
a warning.
My acquaintance said to the police that he would make a
complaint. The senior among them advised him against wasting his time. At that
time of night, there would be no one to complain to in the local commissariat.
He would have to go the following day and would have to wait on line for three
hours. He would have to return several times, with a long wait each time. And in
the end, nothing would be done.
As for the police, he added, they did not
want to make an arrest in a case like this. There would be too much paperwork.
And even if the case came to court, the judge would give no proper punishment.
Moreover, such an arrest would retard their careers. The local police chiefs
were paid by results—by the crime rates in their areas of jurisdiction. The last
thing they wanted was for policemen to go around finding and recording
crime.
Not long afterward, I heard of another case in which the police
simply refused to record the occurrence of a burglary, much less try to catch
the culprits.
Now crime and general disorder are making inroads into
places where, not long ago, they were unheard of. At a peaceful and prosperous
village near Fontainebleau that I visited—the home of retired high officials and
of a former cabinet minister—criminality had made its first appearance only two
weeks before. There had been a burglary and a “rodeo”—an impromptu race of
youths in stolen cars around the village green, whose fence the car thieves had
knocked over to gain access.
A villager called the police, who said they
could not come at the moment, but who politely called back half an hour later to
find out how things were going. Two hours later still, they finally appeared,
but the rodeo had moved on, leaving behind only the remains of a burned-out car.
The blackened patch on the road was still visible when I visited.
The
official figures for this upsurge, doctored as they no doubt are, are
sufficiently alarming. Reported crime in France has risen from 600,000 annually
in 1959 to 4 million today, while the population has grown by less than 20
percent (and many think today’s crime number is an underestimate by at least a
half). In 2000, one crime was reported for every sixth inhabitant of Paris, and
the rate has increased by at least 10 percent a year for the last five years.
Reported cases of arson in France have increased 2,500 percent in seven years,
from 1,168 in 1993 to 29,192 in 2000; robbery with violence rose by 15.8 percent
between 1999 and 2000, and 44.5 percent since 1996 (itself no golden
age).
Where does the increase in crime come from? The geographical
answer: from the public housing projects that encircle and increasingly besiege
every French city or town of any size, Paris especially. In these housing
projects lives an immigrant population numbering several million, from North and
West Africa mostly, along with their French-born descendants and a smattering of
the least successful members of the French working class. From these projects,
the excellence of the French public transport system ensures that the most
fashionable arrondissements are within easy reach of the most inveterate thief
and vandal.
Architecturally, the housing projects sprang from the ideas
of Le Corbusier, the Swiss totalitarian architect—and still the untouchable hero
of architectural education in France—who believed that a house was a machine for
living in, that areas of cities should be entirely separated from one another by
their function, and that the straight line and the right angle held the key to
wisdom, virtue, beauty, and efficiency. The mulish opposition that met his
scheme to pull down the whole of the center of Paris and rebuild it according to
his “rational” and “advanced” ideas baffled and frustrated him.
The
inhuman, unadorned, hard-edged geometry of these vast housing projects in their
unearthly plazas brings to mind Le Corbusier’s chilling and tyrannical words:
“The despot is not a man. It is the . . . correct, realistic, exact plan . . .
that will provide your solution once the problem has been posed clearly. . .
This plan has been drawn up well away from . . . the cries of the electorate or
the laments of society’s victims. It has been drawn up by serene and lucid
minds.”
But what is the problem to which these housing projects, known as
cités, are the solution, conceived by serene and lucid minds like Le
Corbusier’s? It is the problem of providing an Habitation de Loyer Modéré—a
House at Moderate Rent, shortened to HLM—for the workers, largely immigrant,
whom the factories needed during France’s great industrial expansion from the
1950s to the 1970s, when the unemployment rate was 2 percent and cheap labor was
much in demand. By the late eighties, however, the demand had evaporated, but
the people whose labor had satisfied it had not; and together with their
descendants and a constant influx of new hopefuls, they made the provision of
cheap housing more necessary than ever.
An apartment in this publicly
owned housing is also known as a logement, a lodging, which aptly conveys the
social status and degree of political influence of those expected to rent them.
The cités are thus social marginalization made concrete: bureaucratically
planned from their windows to their roofs, with no history of their own or
organic connection to anything that previously existed on their sites, they
convey the impression that, in the event of serious trouble, they could be cut
off from the rest of the world by switching off the trains and by blockading
with a tank or two the highways that pass through them, (usually with a concrete
wall on either side), from the rest of France to the better parts of Paris. I
recalled the words of an Afrikaner in South Africa, who explained to me the
principle according to which only a single road connected black townships to the
white cities: once it was sealed off by an armored car, “the blacks can foul
only their own nest.”
The average visitor gives not a moment’s thought to
these Cités of Darkness as he speeds from the airport to the City of Light. But
they are huge and important—and what the visitor would find there, if he
bothered to go, would terrify him.
A kind of anti-society has grown up in
them—a population that derives the meaning of its life from the hatred it bears
for the other, “official,” society in France. This alienation, this gulf of
mistrust—greater than any I have encountered anywhere else in the world,
including in the black townships of South Africa during the apartheid years—is
written on the faces of the young men, most of them permanently unemployed, who
hang out in the pocked and potholed open spaces between their logements. When
you approach to speak to them, their immobile faces betray not a flicker of
recognition of your shared humanity; they make no gesture to smooth social
intercourse. If you are not one of them, you are against them.
Their
hatred of official France manifests itself in many ways that scar everything
around them. Young men risk life and limb to adorn the most inaccessible
surfaces of concrete with graffiti—BAISE LA POLICE, fuck the police, being the
favorite theme. The iconography of the cités is that of uncompromising hatred
and aggression: a burned-out and destroyed community-meeting place in the Les
Tarterets project, for example, has a picture of a science-fiction humanoid, his
fist clenched as if to spring at the person who looks at him, while to his right
is an admiring portrait of a huge slavering pit bull, a dog by temperament and
training capable of tearing out a man’s throat—the only breed of dog I saw in
the cités, paraded with menacing swagger by their owners.
There are
burned-out and eviscerated carcasses of cars everywhere. Fire is now fashionable
in the cités: in Les Tarterets, residents had torched and looted every
store—with the exceptions of one government-subsidized supermarket and a
pharmacy. The underground parking lot, charred and blackened by smoke like a
vault in an urban hell, is permanently closed.
When agents of official
France come to the cités, the residents attack them. The police are hated: one
young Malian, who comfortingly believed that he was unemployable in France
because of the color of his skin, described how the police invariably arrived
like a raiding party, with batons swinging—ready to beat whoever came within
reach, irrespective of who he was or of his innocence of any crime, before
retreating to safety to their commissariat. The conduct of the police, he said,
explained why residents threw Molotov cocktails at them from their windows. Who
could tolerate such treatment at the hands of une police
fasciste?
Molotov cocktails also greeted the president of the republic,
Jacques Chirac, and his interior minister when they recently campaigned at two
cités, Les Tarterets and Les Musiciens. The two dignitaries had to beat a swift
and ignominious retreat, like foreign overlords visiting a barely held and
hostile suzerainty: they came, they saw, they scuttled off.
Antagonism
toward the police might appear understandable, but the conduct of the young
inhabitants of the cités toward the firemen who come to rescue them from the
fires that they have themselves started gives a dismaying glimpse into the depth
of their hatred for mainstream society. They greet the admirable firemen (whose
motto is Sauver ou périr, save or perish) with Molotov cocktails and hails of
stones when they arrive on their mission of mercy, so that armored vehicles
frequently have to protect the fire engines.
Benevolence inflames the
anger of the young men of the cités as much as repression, because their rage is
inseparable from their being. Ambulance men who take away a young man injured in
an incident routinely find themselves surrounded by the man’s “friends,” and
jostled, jeered at, and threatened: behavior that, according to one doctor I
met, continues right into the hospital, even as the friends demand that their
associate should be treated at once, before others.
Of course, they also
expect him to be treated as well as anyone else, and in this expectation they
reveal the bad faith, or at least ambivalence, of their stance toward the
society around them. They are certainly not poor, at least by the standards of
all previously existing societies: they are not hungry; they have cell phones,
cars, and many other appurtenances of modernity; they are dressed
fashionably—according to their own fashion—with a uniform disdain of bourgeois
propriety and with gold chains round their necks. They believe they have rights,
and they know they will receive medical treatment, however they behave. They
enjoy a far higher standard of living (or consumption) than they would in the
countries of their parents’ or grandparents’ origin, even if they labored there
14 hours a day to the maximum of their capacity.
But this is not a cause
of gratitude—on the contrary: they feel it as an insult or a wound, even as they
take it for granted as their due. But like all human beings, they want the
respect and approval of others, even—or rather especially—of the people who
carelessly toss them the crumbs of Western prosperity. Emasculating dependence
is never a happy state, and no dependence is more absolute, more total, than
that of most of the inhabitants of the cités. They therefore come to believe in
the malevolence of those who maintain them in their limbo: and they want to keep
alive the belief in this perfect malevolence, for it gives meaning—the only
possible meaning—to their stunted lives. It is better to be opposed by an enemy
than to be adrift in meaninglessness, for the simulacrum of an enemy lends
purpose to actions whose nihilism would otherwise be self-evident.
That
is one of the reasons that, when I approached groups of young men in Les
Musiciens, many of them were not just suspicious (though it was soon clear to
them that I was no member of the enemy), but hostile. When a young man of
African origin agreed to speak to me, his fellows kept interrupting menacingly.
“Don’t talk to him,” they commanded, and they told me, with fear in their eyes,
to go away. The young man was nervous, too: he said he was afraid of being
punished as a traitor. His associates feared that “normal” contact with a person
who was clearly not of the enemy, and yet not one of them either, would
contaminate their minds and eventually break down the them-and-us worldview that
stood between them and complete mental chaos. They needed to see themselves as
warriors in a civil war, not mere ne’er-do-wells and criminals.
The
ambivalence of the cité dwellers matches “official” France’s attitude toward
them: over-control and interference, alternating with utter abandonment.
Bureaucrats have planned every item in the physical environment, for example,
and no matter how many times the inhabitants foul the nest (to use the
Afrikaner’s expression), the state pays for renovation, hoping thereby to
demonstrate its compassion and concern. To assure the immigrants that they and
their offspring are potentially or already truly French, the streets are named
for French cultural heroes: for painters in Les Tarterets (rue Gustave Courbet,
for example) and for composers in Les Musiciens (rue Gabriel Fauré). Indeed, the
only time I smiled in one of the cités was when I walked past two concrete
bunkers with metal windows, the école maternelle Charles Baudelaire and the
école maternelle Arthur Rimbaud. Fine as these two poets are, theirs are not
names one would associate with kindergartens, let alone with concrete
bunkers.
But the heroic French names point to a deeper official
ambivalence. The French state is torn between two approaches: Courbet, Fauré,
nos ancêtres, les gaullois, on the one hand, and the shibboleths of
multiculturalism on the other. By compulsion of the ministry of education, the
historiography that the schools purvey is that of the triumph of the unifying,
rational, and benevolent French state through the ages, from Colbert onward, and
Muslim girls are not allowed to wear headscarves in schools. After graduation,
people who dress in “ethnic” fashion will not find jobs with major employers.
But at the same time, official France also pays a cowering lip service to
multiculturalism—for example, to the “culture” of the cités. Thus, French rap
music is the subject of admiring articles in Libération and Le Monde, as well as
of pusillanimous expressions of approval from the last two ministers of
culture.
One rap group, the Ministère amer (Bitter Ministry), won special
official praise. Its best-known lyric: “Another woman takes her beating./ This
time she’s called Brigitte./ She’s the wife of a cop./ The novices of vice piss
on the police./ It’s not just a firework, scratch the clitoris./ Brigitte the
cop’s wife likes niggers./ She’s hot, hot in her pants.” This vile rubbish
receives accolades for its supposed authenticity: for in the multiculturalist’s
mental world, in which the savages are forever noble, there is no criterion by
which to distinguish high art from low trash. And if intellectuals, highly
trained in the Western tradition, are prepared to praise such degraded and
brutal pornography, it is hardly surprising that those who are not so trained
come to the conclusion that there cannot be anything of value in that tradition.
Cowardly multiculturalism thus makes itself the handmaiden of anti-Western
extremism.
Whether or not rap lyrics are the authentic voice of the
cités, they are certainly its authentic ear: you can observe many young men in
the cités sitting around in their cars aimlessly, listening to it for hours on
end, so loud that the pavement vibrates to it 100 yards away. The imprimatur of
the intellectuals and of the French cultural bureaucracy no doubt encourages
them to believe that they are doing something worthwhile. But when life begins
to imitate art, and terrible gang-rapes occur with increasing frequency, the
same official France becomes puzzled and alarmed. What should it make of the 18
young men and two young women currently being tried in Pontoise for allegedly
abducting a girl of 15 and for four months raping her repeatedly in basements,
stairwells, and squats? Many of the group seem not merely unrepentant or
unashamed but proud.
Though most people in France have never visited a
cité, they dimly know that long-term unemployment among the young is so rife
there that it is the normal state of being. Indeed, French youth unemployment is
among the highest in Europe—and higher the further you descend the social scale,
largely because high minimum wages, payroll taxes, and labor protection laws
make employers loath to hire those whom they cannot easily fire, and whom they
must pay beyond what their skills are worth.
Everyone acknowledges that
unemployment, particularly of the permanent kind, is deeply destructive, and
that the devil really does find work for idle hands; but the higher up the
social scale you ascend, the more firmly fixed is the idea that the labor-market
rigidities that encourage unemployment are essential both to distinguish France
from the supposed savagery of the Anglo-Saxon neo-liberal model (one soon learns
from reading the French newspapers what anglo-saxon connotes in this context),
and to protect the downtrodden from exploitation. But the labor-market
rigidities protect those who least need protection, while condemning the most
vulnerable to utter hopelessness: and if sexual hypocrisy is the vice of the
Anglo-Saxons, economic hypocrisy is the vice of the French.
It requires
little imagination to see how, in the circumstances, the burden of unemployment
should fall disproportionately on immigrants and their children: and why,
already culturally distinct from the bulk of the population, they should feel
themselves vilely discriminated against. Having been enclosed in a physical
ghetto, they respond by building a cultural and psychological ghetto for
themselves. They are of France, but not French.
The state, while
concerning itself with the details of their housing, their education, their
medical care, and the payment of subsidies for them to do nothing, abrogates its
responsibility completely in the one area in which the state’s responsibility is
absolutely inalienable: law and order. In order to placate, or at least not to
inflame, disaffected youth, the ministry of the interior has instructed the
police to tread softly (that is to say, virtually not at all, except by
occasional raiding parties when inaction is impossible) in the more than 800
zones sensibles—sensitive areas—that surround French cities and that are known
collectively as la Zone.
But human society, like nature, abhors a vacuum,
and so authority of a kind, with its own set of values, occupies the space where
law and order should be—the authority and brutal values of psychopathic
criminals and drug dealers. The absence of a real economy and of law means, in
practice, an economy and an informal legal system based on theft and
drug-trafficking. In Les Tarterets, for example, I observed two dealers openly
distributing drugs and collecting money while driving around in their highly
conspicuous BMW convertible, clearly the monarchs of all they surveyed. Both of
northwest African descent, one wore a scarlet baseball cap backward, while the
other had dyed blond hair, contrasting dramatically with his complexion. Their
faces were as immobile as those of potentates receiving tribute from conquered
tribes. They drove everywhere at maximum speed in low gear and high noise: they
could hardly have drawn more attention to themselves if they tried. They didn’t
fear the law: rather, the law feared them.
I watched their proceedings in
the company of old immigrants from Algeria and Morocco, who had come to France
in the early 1960s. They too lived in Les Tarterets and had witnessed its
descent into a state of low-level insurgency. They were so horrified by daily
life that they were trying to leave, to escape their own children and
grandchildren: but once having fallen into the clutches of the system of public
housing, they were trapped. They wanted to transfer to a cité, if such existed,
where the new generation did not rule: but they were without leverage—or
piston—in the giant system of patronage that is the French state. And so they
had to stay put, puzzled, alarmed, incredulous, and bitter at what their own
offspring had become, so very different from what they had hoped and expected.
They were better Frenchmen than either their children or grandchildren: they
would never have whistled and booed at the Marseillaise, as their descendants
did before the soccer match between France and Algeria in 2001, alerting the
rest of France to the terrible canker in its midst.
Whether France was
wise to have permitted the mass immigration of people culturally very different
from its own population to solve a temporary labor shortage and to assuage its
own abstract liberal conscience is disputable: there are now an estimated 8 or 9
million people of North and West African origin in France, twice the number in
1975—and at least 5 million of them are Muslims. Demographic projections (though
projections are not predictions) suggest that their descendants will number 35
million before this century is out, more than a third of the likely total
population of France.
Indisputably, however, France has handled the
resultant situation in the worst possible way. Unless it assimilates these
millions successfully, its future will be grim. But it has separated and
isolated immigrants and their descendants geographically into dehumanizing
ghettos; it has pursued economic policies to promote unemployment and create
dependence among them, with all the inevitable psychological consequences; it
has flattered the repellent and worthless culture that they have developed; and
it has withdrawn the protection of the law from them, allowing them to create
their own lawless order.
No one should underestimate the danger that this
failure poses, not only for France but also for the world. The inhabitants of
the cités are exceptionally well armed. When the professional robbers among them
raid a bank or an armored car delivering cash, they do so with bazookas and
rocket launchers, and dress in paramilitary uniforms. From time to time, the
police discover whole arsenals of Kalashnikovs in the cités. There is a vigorous
informal trade between France and post-communist Eastern Europe: workshops in
underground garages in the cités change the serial numbers of stolen luxury cars
prior to export to the East, in exchange for sophisticated weaponry.
A
profoundly alienated population is thus armed with serious firepower; and in
conditions of violent social upheaval, such as France is in the habit of
experiencing every few decades, it could prove difficult to control. The French
state is caught in a dilemma between honoring its commitments to the more
privileged section of the population, many of whom earn their livelihoods from
administering the dirigiste economy, and freeing the labor market sufficiently
to give the hope of a normal life to the inhabitants of the cités. Most likely,
the state will solve the dilemma by attempts to buy off the disaffected with
more benefits and rights, at the cost of higher taxes that will further stifle
the job creation that would most help the cité dwellers. If that fails, as in
the long run it will, harsh repression will follow.
But among the third
of the population of the cités that is of North African Muslim descent, there is
an option that the French, and not only the French, fear. For imagine yourself a
youth in Les Tarterets or Les Musiciens, intellectually alert but not well
educated, believing yourself to be despised because of your origins by the
larger society that you were born into, permanently condemned to unemployment by
the system that contemptuously feeds and clothes you, and surrounded by a
contemptible nihilistic culture of despair, violence, and crime. Is it not
possible that you would seek a doctrine that would simultaneously explain your
predicament, justify your wrath, point the way toward your revenge, and
guarantee your salvation, especially if you were imprisoned? Would you not seek
a “worthwhile” direction for the energy, hatred, and violence seething within
you, a direction that would enable you to do evil in the name of ultimate good?
It would require only a relatively few of like mind to cause havoc. Islamist
proselytism flourishes in the prisons of France (where 60 percent of the inmates
are of immigrant origin), as it does in British prisons; and it takes only a
handful of Zacharias Moussaouis to start a conflagration.
The French knew
of this possibility well before September 11: in 1994, their special forces
boarded a hijacked aircraft that landed in Marseilles and killed the
hijackers—an unusual step for the French, who have traditionally preferred to
negotiate with, or give in to, terrorists. But they had intelligence suggesting
that, after refueling, the hijackers planned to fly the plane into the Eiffel
Tower. In this case, no negotiation was possible.
A terrible chasm has
opened up in French society, dramatically exemplified by a story that an
acquaintance told me. He was driving along a six-lane highway with housing
projects on both sides, when a man tried to dash across the road. My
acquaintance hit him at high speed and killed him instantly.
According to
French law, the participants in a fatal accident must stay as near as possible
to the scene, until officials have elucidated all the circumstances. The police
therefore took my informant to a kind of hotel nearby, where there was no staff,
and the door could be opened only by inserting a credit card into an automatic
billing terminal. Reaching his room, he discovered that all the furniture was of
concrete, including the bed and washbasin, and attached either to the floor or
walls.
The following morning, the police came to collect him, and he
asked them what kind of place this was. Why was everything made of
concrete?
“But don’t you know where you are, monsieur?” they asked.
“C’est la Zone, c’est la Zone.”
La Zone is a foreign country: they do
things differently there.