 Plutonic Plurus, Chico, one question today is, is cryptocurrency a way to democratize or decentralize the economy and state economy relations? And or will the technocratic oligarchy try to integrate a cryptocurrency to abolish cash money and update their oligarchic system? So Plutonic Plurus, what you said is true except for a couple of wordings there, right? Is cryptocurrency a way to democratize or decentralize the economy? It is a way to decentralize finance, that yes, and stated economy relations, yes. And or will technocrats oligarchy try to integrate a cryptocurrency to abolish cash and update their oligarchic system? They will try to and they will do their best to integrate a digital currency, it won't be a cryptocurrency. Cryptocurrency by design has to be decentralized, right? So my take on it anyway, and I'm pretty sure that's the general consensus, right? So it's not going to be cryptocurrency they're going to introduce, it's going to be a digital currency they're going to introduce, right? And people call them, people say normies I guess, I don't know, whatever. Those people who don't understand the difference between the two will think, oh, they got digital currency. Cryptocurrency is different and cryptocurrency has already democratized, decentralized that aspect of finance, right? There is now how many thousand cryptocurrencies out there, right? People were saying when it was like 1500 people said, oh, so many cryptocurrencies, I think we're at 15,000 now. So that's totally decentralized, right? Some cryptocurrencies better than other cryptocurrencies, right? So for example, there are cryptocurrencies out there where you can see where every coin has been since inception, right? That is not a private currency, that is Bitcoin, right? With Bitcoin, it's not fungible, right? You can distinguish between them, right? So they could just say this one is not valid, this coin, because it went through a dark web, right? There are currencies out there, cryptocurrencies out there, where the, you can't, that track record is not there, right? Monero is one of them. There are other privacy coins out there. There aren't that many privacy coins. So if you want to decentralize, my recommendation to people is to go into the privacy coins, not to go into the coins that you can track everything, right? You can track where that coin has been, right? The ledger system has to be encrypted and encrypted in a way that you cannot tell which, where the currency has gone, the transaction links, right? Because my $5 should be equal to your $5. When it comes to Bitcoin, that's not the case. My $5 might be clean and yours might have been used in a club to party, right? And if all the Sunday come on and say, oh, any $5 bill or $20 bill, $100 bill that's, you've been used in a club to party is no longer valid currency, then wow, what's going to happen, right?