 Then when did you and your brother realize like, no bueno, no more, you know? So that was actually a pretty easy one because like I said, my mind had been somewhat made up from the beginning, but my family was still a bit reluctant to say, hey, this is too much. So they were all doing great in growing their mining operations until December 2017. December 2017 was the day the... So this is five years running mining operations. Pretty much. Yeah, pretty much. Like the, mind you, the big growth happened. Like the first year was very experimental. The second year, like the bigger, the big growth years were I would, I want to say 2016 and 2017. Those were years. Roughly speaking within the industry, five years, two years of growth. So now 2017 will happen. So, okay. In 2016, we start, in 2016 and 2017, it was more and more people setting up machines and wanting every time more and more help, setting up bigger and bigger facilities. We had at that point now become known as like the guys that would help you out, right? And so that was very rare because no one in this space would actually was willing to help you. We were very different in that. We just wanted to share. We thought this was amazing and we wanted to help people out. And so, at the end of 2017, Venezuela with this whole Petro effort, which we can get into in all sorts of detail because there's a perception outside of Venezuela of what the Petro was, but that's not a lot. The Petro coin? Yeah, the Petro Venezuela and Petro. So the Petro was essentially a big organized campaign or a way for Maduro to tell his cronies what a mining machine was and essentially that they could go and take them and change the wallet address and that no one would know. And essentially letting them know that they could go extort the new entrepreneurs, right? Because everyone that had an import, export business, farms, everyone had become a miner. There was just no private business happening outside of mining. So the government was like, okay, well, we need to keep our crooks happy. Usually they do that by sending them to industries or whatever and asking or demanding for ridiculous things. So they'll get payouts and bribes in many ways. So they needed a company that was willing to pay out bribes, right? And like every time there's fewer and fewer because they're decimating all of them. So in the absence of any company to send them to get bribes, they said, okay, well, let's teach them what these machines are, how much they make and where they can find them and how they can find them. And it's quite simple and they'll go and grab them all, right? And they'll just extort up dollars. And if not, they'll just take the machines. It's gonna be beautiful. And that's actually what happened. So you had to knock on the door? Oh yeah. Myself and many, and like many, many. Yeah, I can share lists of friends that had the same happen. So what did they go down? Were they pretty blunt with you, like pay up? Yeah, pretty basically 15K and your computers or you're going to jail. And obviously their response was like, okay, why? Like we don't break it, we don't break any law. Like here's my import records. Here's all the hydro I paid. Like here's my internet bills. Like what about this is illegal? And they're like, no, but it's funny because at the time they had the backdrop of the Petra, which is we're making everything illegal. Everyone can mine. Venezuela's gonna become a tech, blah, blah, blah, blah. But on the other side you had, no, it's illegal. You need to pay up or else. And so it was funny because it was an interesting conversation back and forth because it was like, well, A, you're saying this morning you said it was legal. Here's the registry. I'm offering you to give you these things, but you're telling me that it's illegal. Essentially, like you just want my machines. So like a lot of people that knew kind of how, what the leavers were and what they could claim was their rights. Some people still were under the impression that you had those in Venezuela. You know, there's some pushback, right? Cause we weren't, we didn't consider ourselves criminals, right? My brother or neither, none of us, but punctually they were after my brother at the time. So we essentially took a very harsh stance. It's just that, no, we're not breaking any laws. Like we're willing to go to court if you want. Let's do this, let's dance. Cause we're not like, we'll win. That's not, that was actually like very rare. Most people just paid up and shut up. And they still do it today. But so my brother, in my brother's case, they upset them that we weren't just willing to write a check. And they started threatening us with like, they telling my brother they knew where he lived and where the kids went to school and all the stuff, stuff that cops should never be telling you, right? So my brother is like at this point, I remember my brother was the only one. Cause these are federales. Yeah, these are the feds. So my brother was alone in Venezuela at the time. My dad was out of the country, my other brother was out, I was out. So it was scary. So he was scared. He was like, you never thought that the next thing they would say after you said, no, I want to actually like go through the due process. Like there is no due process that you're in jail. So that was like the last thing anyone expected. So after they went like full like, no El Chapo like Escobar, like what's the second we realized that these guys aren't, these guys are just criminals. Straight criminal thugs. So my brother made the call to leave the country overnight. He drove to the border with him and a couple of friends that didn't, you know, were kind enough to do a convoy. Like I said, you don't drive at night in Venezuela. So if you do, you drive with like a convoy and guns strapped, you know, fucking strapped to the nine. Yeah. So they, he drove on a convoy with a bunch of cash, was able to get through to Colombia. He, we fought the case legally from abroad. Essentially he's now been fully part, like there's the case has been dismissed. He's been given a full kind of a reinstatement of, you know, no laws were broken. So he's free to go in and out. He still hasn't gone back. My youngest and my dad, they still go back and forth in and out once in a while. But I think to me personally speaking, it was a bit of a blessing in disguise because my family needed to be shocked.