 In our income tax formula, we're now focused on the adjustments to income, line two of the formula. Remembering that the first half of the formula is in essence an income statement, although a strange one where we have income up top minus the equivalent of the deduct of the expenses being deductions equals the equivalent of net income that being the taxable income. Our objective flipped on its head. We want taxable income as low as possible as opposed to normal income statement rules where we typically want the net income. I wanted the money. To be as high as possible in prior presentations, we talked about what needed to be included in income. Now we're looking at one of the components of the deductions. These being the adjustments to income, you can call them above the line deductions, schedule one deductions. They could be called a adjustment to income, which you might say is like a counter income or a contra income account, because they're getting to this other subtotal on the way down to the net income equivalent number that being taxable income. And that subtotal is adjusted gross income, which is an important number, an important subtotal, because that's the one that's gonna be used when we apply phase outs into the system for phasing out say credits or phasing out say deductions as income levels go up. Remember, there is a distinction between these types of the deductions, the above the line deductions or adjustments to income, and taking one of the two of the standard deduction or itemized deductions, meaning the standard deductions will be taken if they're higher and we would only be categorizing the itemized deduction. Exactly, good deduction. And if they add up to going over the threshold of the standard deductions, but the above the line deductions we're looking at now, if we qualify for them, we don't have that same kind of restriction. We don't have to clear the threshold of a standard deduction in order to get a benefit from them if we qualify for them. Okay, that said, we're down here on line number 10, adjustments to income from schedule one, line 26. If we look at schedule one, then we're looking at schedule one. This is actually page two of schedule one. And we're focused here on 12, certain business expenses for reservists, performing artists, and fee basis government officials attach form 2106. Now, let's just give a quick recap here because the thing we really need to know is that there was more of an expansion of the capacity to have deductions for say W-2 employees, for say business expenses in the past on schedule A, and that has kind of been limited. So that's the main thing that we have to understand here and then know where these limitations are. So remember the general rule in an income tax system raise taxes at your income is that the thing that you would expect to be able to deduct are the things that you have to consume in order to generate revenue. So we're taxing people on the net income, not their gross income, which we can see most clearly on a business tax return like a schedule C where you have an income statement in essence, income minus the expenses or the business deductions getting to the net income that being the taxable amount. When we have W-2 income, it's not as clear because when we're looking at the W-2 income, we don't get other deductions that we consumed in order to generate that revenue because the assumption is that the employer is the one that's providing what we need in order to generate the revenue. And therefore many of our deductions are kind of geared towards other weird things, political purposes, the government trying to incentivize our behavior and so on and so forth. Now it used to be, well, if I had W-2 income that you might be able to deduct some of the business expenses for W-2 income, but instead of doing it directly, it would have to be something that was an itemized deduction, like a miscellaneous deduction on the itemized, but they removed that so we don't, we have severely removed that capacity. So you might have people asking, well, what if I have all these kinds of deductions that I want to deduct because I needed to have them in order to generate income, even though I'm a W-2 employee, well, that capacity has been greatly restricted. And now we have this form 2106, which is now feeding in here to schedule one part two, but only in these really restricted areas where we have, once again, certain business expenses. So again, the business expenses are things that we would assume would be a natural kind of expense, but which are kind of limited if you're a W-2 employee. But these are for these special areas, out reservists performing artists and fee-based government officials, and you can attach form 2106.