 So, you know, on the short term, short to medium term, we're very long dollars. I think it, I think it really applies again, as a consequence of liquidity and credit contraction. And the fact that it's the reserve currency in the world, everyone needs dollars in a liquidity crunch. And there's almost no asset that is uncorrelated, even gold gets smashed. Because in a liquidity event, correlations all go to one, that's what's king. And so, but when you come out of that, when you come out of that car crash, that's when balance sheets matter, that's when solvency matters. And so, like there's that window now, but you know, and we're already positioning for the next and we'll be too early, that's fine, I don't care. But the next is we're balance sheets matter as we solve and see matters. And then the following step after that is where all of that liquidity comes in and it has to find a home. And it's not going to find a home in financial assets, in typical financial assets, because people are going to be scarred from this. But you think about a baby boomer that's got like a year or two away from retirement and they've just lost 30% or 50% in their 401k or whatever the fuck it is in whatever country you happen to be in. There's no ways they're going to dive back into the into the market. Like you might because you're young enough. But when you're 65, it's like, no, I'm going to have just cut the losses. I'm going to what's what's the safest thing that I can that I can own. And so the traditional financial, if you think about the S&P or the NASDAQ or something like that, look, I think they could go up really just as an on a nominal basis. But on a real basis, that's just that's not we well, it's not what we want to be. So and then on a even longer time frame, I think in that capital is going to rush to the U.S. because it's going to be the most liquid markets, it's going to appear to be the safest with respect to rule of law and all that kind of fun stuff. But ultimately, the the the biggest pools of capital are going to move towards resources, essentially, amongst other things. And then in that space, when you're looking at governments and balance sheets and solvency, the way that the West is dealing with this today and the way that the loosely called at the East is dealing with it. Looks on the surface to be similar, but it's not. And what I mean by that is while you've got enormous amounts of debt being taken on by the Western governments, that's not true in the same to the same extent on a percentage basis at all in many of these other countries. I mean, it's on a very basic level. Like if you if you live in, I'll take a country, Thailand, I used to live in Thailand or a place up there. When when the shit hits the family and you have a bigger session or you have something like that take place. People look after the family looks after you. It's a fact. So the social structure in much of those countries is a familial structure. Then nobody's looking at the government to provide health care. Education is the whole social safety net. They're anti-frigerator. They're not dependent on the government. It's a look at if it's like almost like blockchains, a decentralized system, right? Yeah, each family and I'm not saying one is better than the other. Doesn't really matter what you think at the end of the day. That's the structure. And in that environment, what it means is that the government doesn't just go into enormous amounts of debt and put themselves at risk because they're not socially expected to in the same instance or in the same manner. Whereas in the West, it's like they're going off the deep end. They just like throw the kitchen sink at this thing. It doesn't matter. Deficits don't matter. So and then again, that's why M.M.T. I think is it is going to look so attractive on that front. So at that point, then you literally have had a shift of wealth from the West to the East, where people will be so caught up in the smoke and in all the chaos and we're going to come out of this in like 10 years time and they'll be like, fucking hell, look at that. Look at what the world looks like, you know. And so that's my sort of long term view. Right now, I'm like, I'm not going. I'm not buying assets in those countries, but I'm very excited to do so at some point. And the assets that you're referring to, are you still talking about like Mazel Haikerni assets or is any specific domain of assets that you're looking at? Look, for the foreseeable future here, our own deep value stuff, which look going into this, we the most asymmetric deep value opportunities were pretty much in resources. And I'm not a resource guy. Like I'm not, you know, you'll have like plenty. Newsletter publishers or whatever. And their whole slip is either gold or it's like in whatever. I'm not that guy. I'll buy baked beans if they make sense to make money here. Go global and we'll buy whatever. So that's just where the market led us to, right? The extremes in value on a relative basis just with air. And part of that is just because it's cyclical and we've come out of a bull market in sort of two, two and a 12, 20, 13 period. And so there's a whole lot of supply destruction as there always is and across many of these sectors. And so now coming out of it, that's also definitely where I want to be. I want to be invested in those, in those sectors. Like you asked about sort of where I'd be in Asia. I'm going to, I'll wait and see. I'll see what they global marketplace looks like at that point in time and what presents the most asymmetric value. I don't know what it might. It might be Indonesian government bonds. It might be real estate. It might be hotels. I don't know, but that'll be an easy enough equation to figure out at the time. But I do think it'll be an extraordinary setup. And one where you can probably largely put that trend trade on and just sit on it for the next 50 years. Let me ask you this though. When that opportunity does arise, whatever it is, do you think at that point the US dollar would still have that premium for that forex, current exchange? No, no, no. The dollar will have, where, where I want to get out of the dollar is when it's, when everybody is thinking that it's got nowhere to go but up. Right. So as, as you have this credit contraction take place, there's going to be more demand for dollars. If you, you can literally pull up all of the EM currencies and we've been watching them break one after the other. And this is before bat flu came and landed on our fucking doorsteps. And, and the one that's been holding out against it, it's sterling a little bit, mostly the euro. Okay. And we were seeing one after another, these break and I'm sitting there with my pet trader, Brad, and we're like, fucking hell, this is, we're, that's, so we went into this very long dollars, gratefully, not because we knew bat flu was coming along. But yeah, and that's worked out well. But if that, and look, in any case, it's just probabilities. Good investing is just probabilities. I don't know for sure what's going to take place and nobody does. But that's a very decent probability and, and worked. And then you have psychology takes over because people build narratives around what's happening, you know what I mean? You have to, your brain has to solve a problem. Like if I showed you something that looks like an apple, but it's not an apple, I'll be like, what is this? I'm here and you'd be like, cool, ours is sort of an orange. Like your, your reference point is whatever you know that looks like it. And you have to try and solve what that looks like. And you come up with a story about, oh, it's like, maybe they, maybe they crossed an apple with an orange and it's a whatever the fuck that is. Right. And in the same instance, when you have these events, let's say like the dollar runs, people will, will have to solve their problem ahead and they go, why is it running? Oh, it's because the U.S., they'll be, you'll see CNBC will come up with all sorts of shit around why the, why the dollar's the best place to be and why there's nowhere else and why it's going to, you know, there'll be justifications for why that exists. And most of the people will never even see it coming in the first instance. But, but when you get that, that environment and then on a relative basis, when I look at these other currencies and other markets, you're going to start looking and you'll see, oh, there's a country balance sheets, strong, like you've had or a whole lot of bankruptcies, corporate bankruptcies, because of the dollar issue. And guess what? They're not going to be going out and using the dollar anymore as a funding mechanism, right? Because they've been torched, torched by it. And so they'll use something else. I don't know what that's something else. I'm going to ask you by default, something has to substitute it.