 First of all, mark my words, our kids and grandkids are going to laugh at how we educate ourselves. Not only will they not educate the way we do it, they will laugh at us. You know how like we look back and we're like, let me get this straight, you know, in the 1950s black person couldn't drink out of a water fountain. Like people were stupid, okay, we kind of laugh or look down on that mentality. We're going to be like, yeah, we would get $150,000 in debt. We'd get a degree in Egyptology, never been to Egypt. Then we go work as a case manager at a product, you know, some company, nothing to do with Egyptology. And we have 80,000 in debt that we couldn't discharge through bankruptcy that had interest that bogged us down 700 bucks a month and we stressed ourselves out. Do you remember anything you learned? No. Education is going to move online. It's already been proven. There's a good book on this. The army started doing research in the late 1940s in the US. People learn actually 3% better on average than they do in a classroom, which blew my mind. There's been over 200 scientifically validated 3% better. It's just marginally better. It's because learning in a class has some advantages. You don't know the answer, you ask your teacher. But that assumes you don't have a numb nut teacher, which half the teachers in the American high school system hand out packets and then look down.