 So, minimum wage is one of the most awful laws that really, I think, promotes poverty and institutionalizes, unfortunately, a lot of people into an entitlement state and into a poverty state. And the reason is this. Look, minimum wage is a price control. It basically says you're not allowed to hire people below a particular rate. But look, every time I hire somebody at whatever rate it is, I'm expecting to make a profit off of that person. Otherwise, why would I hire them? So, if I'm paying somebody 50 bucks an hour, they better be producing 55, 60, 70 bucks of value to me, otherwise, why would I hire them? Otherwise, if they're only producing 45 bucks, then I'm losing $5 by hiring this person. My, as a business, what I'm in business to do is not to hire, I'm in business to do is make a profit. Many kids, usually teenagers, who've never had a job and who actually can't produce at seven and a quarter. They actually only produce six bucks an hour. And yet I have to hire them at seven and a quarter. That means I'm losing a buck 25 on every hour that they work. Guess what? I'm not going to hire them. I'm going to find some other way to fill the slot that I have. I'm not going to hire them. So the person who comes in with only $6 an hour worth of productive capacity, productive ability, is never going to find a job in this economy. And how is he ever going to develop the $9 an hour capability, the 18 bucks an hour, the 100 bucks an hour one day? How is he going to become the store manager or start his own franchise? How is that ever going to happen if he doesn't get the work experience, if he's shut out of the job market? And by being shut out of the market, he's also told, you know, you're worthless. You're no good. You can't even find a job. Nobody wants you. I mean, psychologically, that's demoralizing and hurtful. And then the government steps in and say, but don't worry, we'll take care of you. We've got welfare programs and all these other programs. I mean, that's just breeds this poverty, welfare, entitlement, and mentality that unfortunately exists. Place controls don't work. We've tried them with bread. We've tried them with gasoline. We've tried, I mean, Richard Nixon froze prices and complete failure in the early 1970s. This Soviet trade, it's socialist trade. Everybody tries it. The Federal Reserve tries it. Price controls fail and wages are just a price. And you know, we're against central planning and economically, it's incredibly destructive.