 All right, let's start with Millet. Talk about Argentina. Millet suffered a serious blow. This was it yesterday for his agenda. He maybe signed like 300 pieces of deregulation by executive order. And this is after decades of Argentinian presidents doing stuff through executive order, and Congress basically letting them get away with it. Anyway, in this case, the Senate, the Argentinian Senate, has voted against those. That is, they voted to overturn the executive order that Millet signed. This is an executive order that dramatically deregulated the Argentinian economy and was already being put in place. Now, that doesn't go into law until the lower house votes for the same thing. But Millet does not have a majority in the lower house. I mean, we talked about this originally when he was elected. Millet has a very small political party. And therefore, from a legislative perspective, there's very, sadly, there's little he can do unless he rallies support from political parties that are clearly opposed to him and his agenda. So not only is the package of privatization changes in spending, the omnibus bill that Millet proposed, not only is that basically being killed by the legislature, but now the legislature has attempted to kill the deregulations that Millet passed in the first few days of his administration. Millet's going to fight this. He's going to fight this in the lower house. But again, he does not have the political backing. He does not have the political support. And unless the Argentinian people start turning out in his support and start putting pressure on politicians, his agenda is going to get completely scrapped. Talking about the omnibus bill, Millet is not proposing a trimmed-down version of that bill. For example, that does not include the privatization of the Argentina oil company, which is sad. And so it's a bunch of other things that needed to happen, needed to happen in Argentina he is backing off of in order to get the support of Congress. We will see if they will support even this trimmed-down version. If they smell blood, if they think they can derail him and defeat him, then they might just say no to everything he proposes and make him look as bad as possible. So tragic sad, but completely expected, completely predictable. It's exactly what I told you I thought would happen when Millet was first elected. And what I think a lot of commentators, can he get anything done? Can he get stuff done? And of course, these two things, the executive order and the omnibus bill, only the beginning of everything he would need to do, which includes dollarization and everything else. And if this can get done, then certainly the more radical stuff is going to really be difficult. Now, as I said, I will be in Argentina and we'll have a broader, better, more thorough perspective on Millet and what's going on in Argentina from that trip. I will know, we will hear a lot about the program, what the plan is, what they, the Argentinians, think the probability of success is including people at the very top. So yeah, major setback, not good, I don't know. I don't know what he could do other than basically fire Congress and declare himself a dictator of Argentina, but probably not something he can, should or will do. I mean, then you get the army. Yeah, there's no, there's no clear-cut way to get these passed without the Argentinian people being willing, in a sense, to go out now into the streets and demand of their Congress to support Millet and make it very clear that if they don't, they're going to vote all the bastards out. They're going to vote all the bastards out. The problem, of course, is the people who elected Millet were excited, but are they excited at any particular thing? Are they excited at any particular spending cut might affect them, for example? Are they excited about any particular de-urgulation might affect them? Are they excited at any particular privatization, again, might affect them? So much of the Argentinian economy is controlled by the government today. Anything he does is going to affect people. And will those people take the long view, take the broad view, take the rational view, or will they just try to pursue kind of short-term emotional, their short-term emotions? I don't know, again, I'm curious. I'm curious to speak to Argentinians to see if we can find out what they think.