And then once it became easier to get, it was hard to get for you and I, but the companies who could get it controlled the supply in order to raise demand. Does everybody kind of know that our economy is built on magic? I think everyone should suspect that. Everybody kind of gets the idea that our economy is just like... Smoke and mirrors. And if everybody just realized that a refrigerator was more valuable than gold, we would lose our minds. Yeah, it'd be crazy. I remember one foundational moment for me was when I was in my freshman, junior, freshman, sophomore year of college. My buddy, my buddy John, found out that his dad owned a ton of land. And it was usable land. And the government paid him not to grow things there because if they did grow things there, it could hurt the supply. It would inflate the supply, and corn prices would end up going down. And so in order to offset that, the government pays a lot of people who have land to not do anything with it. And so he had this plot of land where there was just a shack out there, and we would go and get drunk and have bonfires. And stuff like that. I guess his dad would go maybe kill a deer every now and again. Maybe illegal. What are you, a loser? Come on. But that to me was always like, oh, I had no, like, because of the family that I come from, I had no access to that idea, that that was part of the price-modifying, price-stabilizing mechanism that goes into just the food we eat. Yeah. And if you extrapolate that out to gold, diamonds, any of these commodities and stuff like that, obviously there are people who are manipulating everything. But... It's not an evil manipulation. It's a stabilizing manipulation. I think that that is an important line to draw because any manipulation could be seen as suspect.