 But there's this rumor going around that they want to raise taxes and they're going to go after Wall Street. And they were talking about raising a fee for every transaction that you do. That means it could raise rates to almost like 50%. Like almost 50 times what you're paying now. Do you think that's going to really come to fruition? Did you hear anything about that? You know what I'm talking about? Well, they've been talking about a transaction tax for many, many years and they have a transaction tax in different places around the world. There's a couple of different potential outcomes here. If the Senate is locked and slash blocked, there will be no chance of a transaction tax going through. I just don't see it happening. I do think that there's going to be a lot of pressure on this administration to obviously find money somewhere. And the easy answer is well, you just throw a transaction tax out there. As somebody who's in this industry and who's somebody who trades a lot, I think it would be really, really a bad move and it'd be in some ways disastrous. I mean, of course, we'll get around that if it happens. But it's a huge mistake, but not for the reasons that everybody, I don't think it's for the reasons everybody else thinks. For me, the problem with it is it's a liquidity drain. And if you want to be the center of true economic development, the wonderful thing about America is that in the US, we are the money center of the world. We are the place where the world comes to seek investment, whether it's going public, whether it's private equity, whatever it is, whether it's debt, we are where the world comes for a gigantic pool of liquidity to fund innovative and creative ideas. That's why, except for a couple of really huge Chinese companies that have done well, mostly all of the quote unicorns and all of the kind of the digital monopolies, they all started here and they continue to start here. And most of the new explosive companies are all US based. And that's because we have the flow of money, we have the flow of liquidity. It would be crazy from a long-term economic perspective to run the risk of jeopardizing the pool of liquidity and the flow of money because you suck out liquidity with horrible things like idiotic transaction tax. Now, that said, I'm all for a fair tax on corporations. I'm all for a fair tax on wealthy individuals. I'm not opposed to people paying their fair share. I think a transaction tax would be a monster, monster mistake. No, I know because they look at it. How many transactions are traded a day on the exchanges? I don't know the actual number of transactions. I can tell you that last Monday, so a week ago yesterday, it was the busiest day ever in the world of options. And I believe in futures as well, but I can tell you options for sure. So in the derivative world, we traded just under 49 million contracts. Now that's not trades, but I would assume that it's over the course of a day, it's probably somewhere between 50 and 100 million trades, I'm guessing. Right. So if they put a $50 transaction on every sale. It's not going to be anything like that. No, it wouldn't be anything like that. But whatever it would be, listen, you know what? It's important to have a balance in Washington where people can objectively look at things. We're a very divided society right now. It's not a good thing. And we need to be able to talk through things like this because you can be a free market capitalist and also be a social liberal. And there's a lot of, it's crazy to just be on one side of the aisle. Yeah. And so from my perspective, the transaction tax is a big deal. And hopefully it won't go anywhere. The lobbies are pretty damn strong from the exchanges and from Wall Street. And Wall Street backed Joe Biden in a big way. So I think it's going to be, this was not, you know, Wall Street backed Trump in 2016 and they backed Biden big time in 2020. And they backed Obama in 2008 and 2012. So Wall Street has a history of getting it right. I don't think they made a mistake on this one, you know, with respect to where they committed their dollars to. Mm-hmm. Okay. All right. So, all right, well, like I said, that was getting people kind of nervous because the numbers that we're going down. It gets me nervous. I own a financial technology company and I own a brokerage firm and this is my business. This is my life, you know, and I love trading. And so, yeah, it gets me nervous, but we'll be fine. We'll figure it out. We'll always find a way. There's always a loophole somewhere. Yeah, we'll be fine. So, Tom, tell us a little about anything new that's going on with TastyWorks new platform. Sure. Well, thanks everybody for hanging out with us. Hey, hey, Charles, do you put your video on here? Yes, we could if you want. Yeah, I didn't see your video, but I think people like it. There you go. Yeah, you are. Okay. Are you up? You don't put yours up there? Okay. No, I do. I do. Okay. My name is Tom Stasnoff. If this is your first time with me, great. Thanks. Appreciate you coming out. We love the support and the interest and the engagement, and it's super cool. And if it's your first time with me and Falstow, that's awesome. Like Falstow said, we've been friends. We've been doing stuff together for almost two decades. And since we originally built Thinkorswim years ago, and then obviously Tasty in the last decade. Thinkorswim was a decade from 2000, 2010, and then Tasty from 2011 to 2020. And so if it's your first time with us, welcome aboard and thanks for spending an hour with us. On the chat today, Falstow, Scott, Ryan, and Chris are on. Those are three people that run our trade desk in Chicago. So there's a few hundred people on this chat. So if you have any questions at all, Scott is the CEO, Ryan and Chris run the trade desk. And you're more than welcome to ask them questions about anything. You can ask questions about margin. You can ask questions about fees. You can ask questions about accounts. You can ask questions about strategy. You can ask questions about really risk, anything you want. We're a very transparent company. Nothing's off limits. Fire away. Those three guys are on. So Falstow and I can really give you a good talk. And we don't have to sit and watch all the questions and things like that. So just in case you didn't know, Falstow, those three guys are on. And they'll answer every question that comes in this afternoon. No problem. Okay. And so at Tasty, well, we've continued to do what we do best, which is gear ourselves up for a continuation of the growth in the derivative space. I believe Falstow that stocks have gotten very expensive. And unless they make stocks more tradable through splits and stuff like that. You saw Neo this afternoon, in the last couple of days, has been trading 300, 400 million shares a day, because it's a $45 stock. What we need is more $45 stocks. Neo traded 333 million shares. Yeah. But we would do that much business with a lot of stocks if they were cheap. You can't trade 300 million shares of Amazon. Nobody's got the money. Right. So I think you're going to see a continued move towards a continuation of the move towards people using options and futures and options on futures. And then a little bit of stock trading obviously on stocks like Neo and stuff like that. Let me ask you a question, Tom, regarding about that, do you find that, because there's another question that came across and someone's asked me this, do you find that people that trade options are causing these stocks go up because they have to cover that option? You have to do good on that option? Some people buy a big option play and then obviously they have to cover themselves? Because I'm seeing a shitload of short squeezes going on. How about you? No, I know I heard that when they said SoftBank was in there buying all those tech stocks and buying a lot of calls on those tech stocks. But no, I don't believe that this is a gamma-generated rally. This is a rally that we've just experienced is a legit move based on people trying to... They're racing what a lot of people believe, Fausto, that there is going to be kind of an economic bomb, but a good kind of a bomb. Like an explosion of the day you can get out of the house, the first thing you're going to do is spend some money. You're going to go on a vacation. You're going to buy the things you haven't bought in the last year and a half. You can't spend money right now if you wanted to. So the thought is that there's this kind of economic bomb sitting out there that's just going to blow up and it's going to be reflected in stock prices. And I think people are thinking that way with respect to the markets. And that's why they're buying this up. I think originally they looked at the pandemic as a binary event, which means a couple months after it started, okay, we're going to be out of this thing because we'll have a cure, we'll have whatever, it'll go away, we'll have a vaccine. But now I think they look at it as more of a long-term endemic. But at some point we normalize way more than we are today. And that goes into the stock market and creates a real panic of buying. And so I think that's the reason for the rallies, not option gamma.