 Again, Sleepy Waste Chucho, during the pandemic, there was a lot of uncertainty in many industries and sectors and hence that created a lot of opportunity to buy in and take advantage of some hidden opportunities. This half year of 2021, we are seeing the effects of inflation and everywhere, inflation everywhere and now even used items randomly around the house have shot up and higher value than before. What are your predictions for all the inflation that will probably continue to grow? It's going to continue to grow, exactly what you said. Supply chain might be fixed at some point, but there's a lot of hands on the cookie jar that they do not want this information to get out. That's one thing, but the supply chain to be restored because they have gained a lot of power and they will be able to buy up a lot of industries on the chip, chip, chip, chip, chip. There's money supply that has kicked up a lot. We're going into a multipolar world, so it might be difficult to have access to certain products in the future as easily as we had access to them in the past. There's regulations coming in, for example, in Vancouver. The city of Vancouver was trying to pass a tax on the citizens and governments are coming for more taxes. That's why they want to digitize all currency. By the way, if you live in a country that they're eliminating cash from that country, Canada might be one of them. At some time in the future, you may want to decide to leave that country because you have lost complete anonymity and privacy, which means you have lost your liberty because governments want to tax every single bit of transaction you have in your life, including paying a babysitter, including paying a neighbor's kid to mow the lawn or wash your car or lemonade stand. Little kids that set up a little lemonade stand in front of their house, they even want taxes from that. But in Vancouver, they were trying to pass a tax law. I don't think it passed this year, but they'll try again next year, where every citizen living in Vancouver would have to pay for parking. And anybody that was buying a brand new SUV from 2022 and on would have to pay an extra $1,000 in taxes per year to get insurance on that car and an extra $500 for something else. So brand new SUVs were going to be like an extra $1,000 a year in taxes. Well, if I wanted to buy an SUV, I wouldn't buy a new one. I would buy an older one. So older SUV prices might go up. Lucky for me, I have an older SUV that's been sitting there that I'm most likely going to get fixed up and sold in the next few months. I wasn't really planning on it, but because of certain family situation where our household family is being cut in half, because of certain mandates where my partner being a nurse will not no longer be able to work as a nurse, because the government will allow her to work as a nurse, I'm most likely going to be selling the car to generate a little bit of funds to give us a little bit more buffer. So there's certain things going on. It's not just specifically supply chain related, it's mandate related. It's centralized power trying to grab more power related. It's corporations trying to screw over society and obtain more control related. It's politics, not necessarily economics.