 But that whole buying just for Airbnb was BS. I lived in Kelowna, BC and because so many properties were just for Airbnb, it made finding rent harder and it drove up rental prices when you did find a place. Yeah, and here's the kicker. All this Airbnb gig economy, gig rental, gig housing, it destroys the city. It destroys the community because what happens is during the peak seasons people rent out the place, right? But during the down season, the place is not rented out. So just imagine you're a store in a town that is selling something, whatever it might be, right? During the peak season, you're really busy. During the low season, nobody's coming to your store, but you still have to pay rent. A lot of places like restaurants can't afford that. So they go bankrupt or they close their doors and move on, right? So what happens is you've got a community, you've got a city, you've got a town. Airbnb stuff is not a bad idea, but there's got to be limitations on it, okay? And there's a huge problem with property values anyway. I mean, that's just one of the issues, okay? Pond. Avoid cities if planning a purchase indeed. Cities will hemorrhage occupants in coming years as banking class move to home work and home work, and cities become cesspit of low-grade work. Land and ability to cultivate it will be the future for people. I grew up in London. I left 10 years ago and watched a decline. We'll never go back, not even for a visit. Yeah, I agree with Pond. Big cities are going to be gutted. Right now, what's going on? In terms of cities, about 10 years ago, a little bit longer, corporations and stuff thought it was a great idea to start building private cities, right? So some of these corporations, there were two test areas they were doing. One was in Asia, the other one was in Latin America. Where was it? Uruguay they did it? Or Honduras? Honduras, I think they did it. They were trying to build, they bought this land and there's people living there. They wanted to build a private city. The shit at the fan, people were like, what the hell are you talking about? Private city with their own laws, everything. So it didn't fly over well, right? The billionaires thought it was a great idea. The people went, what? Right? So that plan sort of got ditched. But what's going on now? Those billionaires don't give up, right? Those who want to rule the world, right? What they've ended up doing is now they're trying to build strong cities. Just getting into politics a little bit. We're not going to go too deep in it, but strong cities is basically a certain class of the oligarch technocratic society, people in our societies, taking over a city, making smart cities, strong cities with hardcore surveillance, lack of privacy, okay? Hardcore brutal policing, and they are taking over certain cities. Australia's seeing it happen right now. You don't want to live there unless people take it back. I guess the good thing about investing in Medellin, Colombia is that I'm going to be buying cash, no bank loans to worry about. Okay, cool. But worry about taxes, worry about electricity, worry about water, worry about safety, okay? Worry about the township or the city that you're in going bankrupt. Because once they go bankrupt, if people start leaving, the infrastructure deteriorates and things are cut off. For example, in Detroit, in Detroit, let's say this is Detroit, there were so many dialect houses, abandoned houses that in certain parts of Detroit, the city came out and said no more water, no more electricity. There's people living there, right? But it spars people living there. The city couldn't afford to supply, maintain those areas with electricity and water. So, done. That whole area is done, right? People have to move. Be careful. Look into the whole infrastructure and economics and politics and whatnot.