 I think that for 6,000 years humans have, when we wanted to engage in consensual exchange, we've relied on third parties, these central institutions we set up so strangers we can't trust each other so we just trust that central institution. Well, a lot of times those central institutions start getting pretty big for their bridges and what's happening with blockchain is it's possible for us to have systems where we can have consensual exchange and there does not need to be a third party that we trust. So it's really disruptive, frankly, to a bunch of institutions which have accumulated what civilization is, it's a bunch of these kinds of institutions that establish trust. Now we can achieve trust in this cryptographic way. Those institutions, what happens when you disintermediate and disrupt, not publishing like the internet does, but some real fundamental institutions to society. It's going to make society more honest because, you know, it's like in 1971, the U.S. everything, all currencies were stapled to the U.S. dollar until then and we were connected to gold and in 1971 we cut our tie to gold. That was the first time in history, everything just became free spinning, free spinning and untied to anything real. Well, this is going to let civilization find a bedrock again, a bedrock truth that is not subject to political control and that's what the blockchain can be. And as we start rebuilding institutions from the blockchain, we will be building a society which is more immune to corruption and more transparent, more immune to corruption. It will be a very odd world.