 I guess Dennis, we wanted to hear a little bit about what's been going on with the current administration, just all the terrible stuff that's going on, inflation, everything else. How's that affecting the Free State project and you guys seeing yet more refugees showing up at your borders? Refugee? Is your sudden border open? We've actually been talking about setting up some sort of underground railroad to get our Canadian friends in. They're actually lined up on the board or trying to get in. They're going, let us into New Hampshire, please. My God, poor bastards. Oh my God. It's good business. Totalitarianism is good business for the Free State, I tell you that. This whole national divorce, where the national migration, where conservatives are moving to conservative states and progressives are moving to progressive states, yeah, I got to tell you. We started this whole thing, we said, okay, the Mormon started it, but we said, look, we can't live with you guys anymore. We're not going to convert you, right? You guys died in the rule of authoritarianism, we're not going to convert you, and you're not going to leave us be. So we just need to live separately. And so we started this program about 19 years ago, and it's been expanding every year. Every year we're doing more and more. We have about 10% of the house are free staters. We control more of the house, though, because we have a lot of free staters who are natives. A lot of people, New Hampshire was always in the top two of the Freedom Index while we were building up. So New Hampshire has always been one of the freer states. It's just an ethos here, it's part of the culture here. And so to them, we're not particularly strange. And a lot of our most active people are natives who go, thank God you're here. They jump in and they're going, I got reinforcements, baby, let's go. So we have in the house, the house whip is a free stator. I was talking to the third most powerful person. He's also a free stator. He came here, I don't know how long ago he came, but when he first got here, he first ran as a libertarian in his town to get to the house. He got 18 votes. And then he smarted up. The next election he ran as a Republican, as a Liberty Republican, and he's won five terms since then. He's now the third most powerful man in the house. Dennis, when you say house, you're speaking about your state legislature, right? That's right. That's right. Yeah, so we don't really pay much attention to the federal just because we've got the free state project is for those who are less optimistic that a mass conversion of 100 million people will occur, 100 million people who have been indoctrinated since childhood in their schools and in all the media that you watch that authoritarianism is the only system that makes any sense and that it's kind and it's ethical. We just don't think that that's possible. So what the free state project is, we're just basically saying, look, if you're libertarian and you really, you know, you really want to create something free, come and let's do it on a small scale and model it and demonstrate it to the world. And that's what we're doing. So we're really focused on the local and state level. And that's where we're operating. We don't, you know, what you guys, what you poor suckers are suffering out there. My heart goes out to you. My heart goes out to you, but you ought to be living here. But then it's how you, as you construct or build this free state, OK, how do you resist the temptation to central planning? Because central planning is something that is deep within our, I don't want to say in our genes, but certainly in our psychology. How do you resist that temptation? Well, first of all, you're trying to central plan libertarians who are not particularly good at following orders. So, you know, right there, you know, it's not like you're central planning the authoritarians, you know, the people who salute and say, yes, sir. And then they go running off and do what you tell them. So, you know, the Free State Project, all it is, it's basically four guys, five guys on a, on a, on a, on a board and then two employees. That's all the Free State Project is. And all their, their only job is to send out that beacon, that porcupine beacon. Come to New Hampshire if you are a base libertarian, and you really, really, really want to create a free society in your life. If you, you know, if you, if you don't want to do that, don't come, don't come here. You know, this, this, you know, this is, this is, we're really serious about doing it. Now, when you come here, you know, people, people might come here and say, oh, what should I do? And our answer back to you is, well, what are you excited about? What do you want to do? Because we build, we're building social networks. We're building alternative parallel institutions. And we're doing politics, right? Those are the three big areas that we're doing. I, I don't do, I really don't do, I, I'm really primarily in the social aspects. So the areas that I work on are community clubhouses, building out community clubhouses and, and, and helping people do that. I, I run, I started a bus tour around the different regions so that people can kind of comment and they can understand what's going on and then they learn about the different aspects. You know, I have a coalition that I started for, and we've bought an inn, right? Ferguson, what they want to be, what they want to do. We have the, the, the, the most active crypto usage anywhere in the country. Now there's a couple of countries, other countries that may beat us because their, their, their money has totally collapsed. Okay. But if you want, if you want to use crypto, we have people here who live only on crypto. That's all they only trade crypto. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness always and forever.