 Welcome. Thanks, everybody, for coming out. Really appreciate you guys being here. This is the invisible hands tending the secret greens. We are at DEF CON 26. And maybe next year we can go to Caesars, but we're glad you guys are joining us right now in the Valley of Fire. So essentially what we're going to do today is we're going to give you guys a quick kind of high level macroeconomics slash strategic thinking talk. And typically macroeconomics are made very boring on purpose to kind of keep things obfuscated. And a lot of what you hear and see is not the truth of what's really going on. So instead of like a conspiracy theory talk like you may have heard, this is actually a conspiracy fact talk so you guys can take your tinfoil hats off. And what we wanted to do is give you guys some tools that are actionable to actually start seeing the patterns that are actually going on in the world to kind of see social engineering at scale. So I'm Keith. My background is in user experience, film sound, astrology. I did a talk last year in the SD village about how to hack corporate culture. So if you Google DEF CON change agents you can check that out. So we rolled that into some of this. But I look at a lot of things very systemically and into complex systems. And this is Frank. Hey, everybody. My name is Frank. Cosmovaultron is my handle that I'm going through identifying myself as for this talk. Basically I come from the side of marketing, strategic branding and the consumer experience. Now basically this talk is going to educate you on a few things about how cannabis has changed the world and how it will change the future of how humanity will continue through. But basically this is a disclaimer. These opinions are our own. It's not legal advice, not investment advice. It's up to you to make your own decisions. Think for yourself. They'll be evil. So the basics obviously of what we're all here today is because weed. Weed is becoming mainstream. Is cannabis plus a look at what is our social contract going to equal a new awakening, a new enlightenment, a renaissance 2.0. So again the purpose of this talk is to entertain you guys, educate you on how to look at the world and to see through the narratives and to empower you with that knowledge so that you can as an individual be yourself and empower the free will. Now basically we are all players in this game. Each individual has their purpose to forward this experiment that is called humanity. We find ourselves stuck in a system where we are balancing the love for love and the need for money. I used here a line from Jackson Brown called caught between the longing for love and the struggle for the legal tender. Now it's pretty much always been the same from the beginning. Neolithic man started out as individuals. They came into clans. They found that collectively they can become more than just individual. Through time and space they found that certain things they could unlock the secrets to. The stars, fire. These were very important things that created civilization and allowed us to move forward. Now Neolithic man created fire with many different things but it's said that he would put cannabis on the fire and it is through this relationship through fire and cannabis that Neolithic man became enlightened. Now this enlightenment carried in through to free thought and individualism. It carried through and through medicinal purposes, medicines. Basically cannabis all of a sudden became really the bread basket of civilization. It's what brought humanity to be civilized, to start hunkering down and creating homes, farms specifically. No more hunting and gathering. They could just grow their own things. And it said actually one of the first plants that was ever grown by man specifically and farmed was cannabis. Now cannabis aside from clothing ancient man building their homes and creating what is our modern day farming societies. It also enlightened them. Through the use of cannabis revered priesthood class. People that were pretty much in charge of keeping the knowledge for all of humanity society used cannabis to really open their minds and hearts to what is the ability to think. Now this free throw and knowledge created the ability to persevere past just what is the scene to the unknown. It was cannabis that was responsible for empowering past man to go beyond the borders of what he knew or they knew I should say. It allowed them to create these I should say time machines or future exploring machines. Now back in the day these things were boats. These boats were made out of wood that was then sealed with cannabis tools. The ropes and rigging was made from cannabis. The sales and the money derived from all of these products are directly responsible for us going beyond what was the unknown. So for since the beginning of time in the beginning of humanity cannabis really was the foundation of what is civilization. It created this wealth and it became the king of commodities. A hundred years ago it really empowered the wealth of what is our own creation here in the United States. If it wasn't for hemp we wouldn't have had the wealth or the wherewithal to forge on and create a new society based on the enlightenment. Now cannabis afforded the ability to go explore the world. Empires were built and these empires then centralized wealth based on the king commodity of cannabis. This wealth generated power and that power translated into control. Now basically what that represents more is about how to control society but then to empower as well. There's a famous line from the margin call the movie and it goes something along the fact of money was created so that people wouldn't just shoot themselves to buy a sandwich or shoot each other I should say to buy a sandwich. So in essence the social contract that was created through nationalities was based upon the backing up of wealth and the empowerment of the individual. Now the empowerment of the individual had everything to do with making sure that the man could have free will and also the wherewithal to have the protections of justice and be able to live free and think free. Now we are at a precipice where 10 years ago 15 years ago legalization is actually coming to the forefront. Now today we have the ability to see that the future may be actually driven by cannabis but that remains to be seen. Now as marijuana goes main street we understand that it's more about a war on cash. I mean cannabis is the last of the commodities to be strictly derived and traded through on legal tender cash. The beauty about legalization is that it's now becoming a backdoor to renegotiate all of what is the social contracts around the world. It also has the ability to put humanity towards a path of renewable instead of finite. And through legalization you're going to find that it's really about backstopping control and backstopping the existing social contract. It was such an important commodity to our founding fathers that they 100 years ago saw fit to put it on the back of one of the most important bills they had, a $10 bill. Now in 1919 a $10 bill should be got probably about $10,000, probably more. So for them to depict this cash crop as the bedrock of the foundation of their nation and really the fuel to empower the world and humanity via the industrial revolution it was really the building block of what is our present day future. But what happened? Well you're going to find that because we are going on a path of legalization that the social contract that nation states have with their citizens needs to be renegotiated. It has to be. And it's actually being forced. Now this nation state versus globalism is where it's really the nexus of all of what is wealth, power and control. Now legalization really is about redefining the social contract between people, state and the world. I think a future of cannabis is really the future of humanity without it. We don't have a way to change ourselves from a finite to renewable future and really what it does is empowers humanity to then build the wealth and centralized with information which is the new two commodities that will be the bedrock for our future. So why legalize now? Well it really is going to empower the future of humanity and the individual. It's going to be the vehicle of free will versus feudalism. Now again the social contract that we have today really is about the nation states contracts with their citizens. By legalizing cannabis the United States and other countries are putting themselves in direct contrast to what are the international norms and laws that are put in place. Kind of like what this dude was talking about a few years back. A new world order. What will that be? Is cannabis the antithesis of that or is it a way to empower people or will it then be used as a locus of control as it has in the past? Do you really want a future where the one person decides everything for it all or are we going to have to build a future that we empower each individual to really go after free will, free market and freedom of thought? Now again the basics of what we're going to be covering is everything needs to be negotiated. Commodities, information, data, energy, petrochemical versus renewal. The social contract. All these come into play with legalization. What's really at stake is independent thought and individualism. That is what legalization really in its most pure form is about. And with that I'm going to pass it back to Keith. Alright so to contextualize this and kind of ground this a little bit we're going to break this down into kind of like five sections. One, the ultimate social contract. Two, you should never waste a good crisis. Three, we're going to look at entitlements, taxes and payments. Fourth, we're going to look at renewables. And finally we're going to look at what the small market today is going to be a massive market and then that's a distant future. So the ultimate social contract. When we talk about a social contract it's this ethereal idea that we basically pay taxes and for paying taxes we get protected by the government, we have a military, we have a strong rule of law. If you go to like Venezuela or other countries like say Iran or wherever they don't have the exact same kind of freedoms or abilities that we do and that's a social contract. It's a social governing thing that we all agree to. So the ultimate social contract is the dollar because it's basically backed by confidence. It's not backed by anything anymore. After World War II in 1944 right at the end of World War II there was a meeting in Bretton Woods New Hampshire and all the superpowers at the time got together and said look we're going to exchange for all global trade being done in dollars. We're basically going to, the United States is going to protect the trade routes of the world. And what that means is that we get to print as much money as we can or as much as we want because if the world is going to use dollars whether you're Japan trading with Europe or whoever we have to have enough liquidity or cash out in the system for them to trade which allows us to run deficits. So you can make an argument that debt is actually our biggest export and it's what affords us the ability to have a reserve currency status because we just need to put so much out there. So fast forward to 2008, everything collapsed, people got greedy and essentially central banks you could say colluded or collaborated to print 20 trillion plus for US equivalent in dollars. If you're really into this there's a woman named Naomi Prins. She wrote a book called Collusion It's Really Good. She's an amazing researcher. She did a ton of work on this. It's awesome. It explains how it all works. So now we don't really know what the hell's going on. I mean the derivatives markets what crashed, housing at least and now there's over 600 trillion they think still out and all that fake money creation just totally inflated asset prices. So last year a Da Vinci, Salvatore Mundi sold for $450 million and it doesn't make any sense. And then if you look at how we also calculate unemployment say for government statistics we count people who are collecting unemployment insurance and aren't actually looking for work. So it's a way to kind of the statistics work technically but they're not actually what's reflecting reality. So we could run deficits meaning we could print and spend more than we can actually create in terms of GDP or economic wealth. But now deficits are going to matter because we have uncoming law liabilities with Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security and then demographics meaning all the baby boomers that push the massive expansion post World War II they're starting to retire and they're living longer because technology is enabling us to live longer and have better quality to life. So the dollar is going to break sooner or later and it's really about hegemonic control and our thesis is that by legalizing cannabis you're actually simultaneously legalizing the potential for industrial hemp and this is where the next big commodity like gold or oil is going to come from. So oil and gold used to back the dollar up until about the 70s. I mean oil still does to an extent. You can make an argument about that but our bigger argument is that it's going to be your data, your information plus industrial hemp that's going to be the next wave. And so we're not going to do details now but Frank's going to get into it in a second about the actual market opportunity is in the trillions of dollars if you calculate food, energy, new scale composites and the carbon neutrality or beneficiality you get from growing. So when you legalize something and the whole world says it's illegal, what you would get to do is you get to go open up the world trade agreements and it's a really clever way to back hack the whole system because instead of electing officials who are supposed to represent your opinion and, you know, vote in what you voted in, you're changing the standards that govern the system. So it's kind of like changing the laws of gravity or physics for how everything kind of interacts. So it's very clever but changing standards is essentially what's going to happen. And the real game is about who's going to get hegemonic control. Is it going to be, people will argue is it going to be the U.S. stills? Is it going to be China? This is a whole other conversation. But after all of central bank collusion, all this money printing, everybody got kind of synced up. And if you read Neal Howe, he's a demographer and an economist. He's the guy who coined the term millennials and he wrote a book called The Fourth Turning. So essentially humans live about 80 years, give or take in the modern world. And Neal Howe talks about there's four cycles, 20 years each that happened at the end of the fourth turning, it always ends in revolution or war. And our argument is that we're actually in the middle of a revolution right now except instead of bombs, it's bits of information that's being leveraged to control and essentially SC the world at large. So I also study astrology and you can believe what you want. But for me it's very interesting. It's an interesting way to look at long-term cycles over periods of time. And it's to say, oh, you know, such and such, sunshine or whatever. But so the way to read this is this little green P guy and the black guy. So the black guys on the inside, those are the cross section of where the United States, if it had a chart was born at that time and the green on the exterior is where the planets are now. So the two P's are Pluto and it's inside Capricorn. Capricorn basically represents the patriarchy, the structure, the system, the monolith, the top down hegemonic control and Pluto is all about transformation. And so when these guys line up, which takes 250 years, it's essentially like a phoenix rising kind of baptism by fire moment and everything's being renegotiated right now. So even over, according to the stars, if you believe this kind of thing, temporally, we're right on point for that too. Now on the bottom this little green dude looks like a little trident, that's Neptune. He's about to go into Aries and the last time this happened was a civil war in the United States. So you can believe what you want but I think it's interesting looking at long-term cycles. And then you just have to look all around you. And this is in New York City and you know this is like one of those little walk-not-walk signs but the text says until there's equal accountability for murder, it is totally fair to kill cops. And if that's not a crisis of the social contract, I don't know what is. Politicians never let a good crisis go to waste. That's one main thing you learn from studying the narcotics specifically, the legalization or the prohibition of cannabis. The whole reason we're in this pickle today is because powers that be wanted to move us forward very slowly, very calculated to a global world dominated, controlled, centralized force. Now the clever viola they used was drugs. Most famously. Oh, there you go. It was about 120 years ago. Country starting to get together to discuss about how to trade certain things internationally, specifically narcotics. Now they used the guys of an opium crisis. That sounds familiar. Today we're seeing the same headlines. Politicians are pushing that like it was the new bread and butter. Oh my god everybody, the opium crisis. Well the opium crisis we've been under for about past 300, 400 years turn of the century into 1900, scientists were synthesizing opium into heroin and other byproducts that became extremely addictive and were scourges really on the society. So how in the world did cannabis which represents zero deaths when used? I mean literally you can smoke as much as you want to. I mean you might get a little paranoid and what not, but you're not going to die. How in the world has cannabis been grouped into this large hemogenist narcotics moniker? And specifically how in the world did hemp get there? Hemp doesn't even have any psychotropic effects. It's all about control guys. It's interesting too because we find today that we'll be controlled by language. We're being pushed narratives here and there and it's always being about labeling something or someone as bad and using that label then to not really see them as human anymore. So the powers that be as time progressed from the Hague on through World War One and then after World War One into the Roaring Twenties, the world was going through dramatic change. Specifically the United States was really putting themselves out there as the dominant world power. They made sure along with partners in other nation states to put forward language that held their ideas in place and specifically to control populations. Now the language that was used was to then bulk hemp together with cannabis. Cannabis being a cannabis indica and cannabis sativa. Now hemp is actually a cannabis sativa offshoot but that's another story. Now they cleverly disguised what was the top king commodity, the builder of wells of nations. They disguised that and brought it down to the most ethereal level by demonizing the user. Users were depicted as crazed lunatics. Basically any scourge in society was blamed on marijuana. Now what the real fact was and what they were really hiding was that during the same time prohibition of alcohol was a huge failure. Now what prohibition did basically was overnight created a swath of population that was once legal and law abiding to then all of a sudden criminals. Just because of consuming something that was legal a few months before. This gave rise to a huge gray market and really changed the flow and direction of not only this country but the world. And now we find ourselves a hundred years in after prohibition of marijuana in a system where the user is demonized, controlled, held away from holding a job, held away in prison. Over 50% of people that were arrested over the past hundred years were arrested over marijuana charges. Now if that's not control, I don't know what is. So as time progressed I mean the user of marijuana again labeled as a degenerate. I mean we all know Spicoli. Spicoli was a burnout. And basically that narrative was then continued through in the counter culture to control that population just the same. And really at the essence of it all is it's all about narrating and controlling the message. And media is just slapping us down and really piling us into the mat and just shredding our brain and the ability to really think and free thought for ourselves. I mean man has forever been trying to consolidate their information and knowledge and pass it on to future generations. In our lifetimes that was left mostly to what is the mainstream media. But now we find ourselves and mainstream media should say finds itself more as a paid PR machine. They're really a shell of them former selves. I mean this is the magazine rack at the very back of the CVS. They're not even in the front anymore. Consolidation of all these media companies too shows centralization of control. But what's ironic is these guys were the ones that for the message of the evil crazed madness marijuana user to forward the prohibition of marijuana. But then ironically today these companies are the same ones that are putting out these kind of population propaganda. What is their motivation now? I mean back in the day Hearst basically lobbied because he owned all the paper interest to get rid of marijuana because he didn't want hemp to be messing with all the forests that he was getting his paper from. Point being we have come and have grown up in society where aside from debt up until ten years ago the number one export in the United States was entertainment industry. And it brings us to today like I was saying every population or every publications now are really just embracing weed. Why? I mean what's interesting enough too is that today I think we are in a special place in time in humanity. There's no more hiding the truth. I mean we have information at our fingertips and really it travels at the speed of light. It encompasses all of what is the knowledge of humanity at the hands of just a quick search and a search engine page. Now imagine that control I mean what what kind of control do these companies really have? Now we find ourselves in the same kind of position we were a hundred years ago when legalization wasn't a thing. I mean when such say prohibition of marijuana was coming into play. These same forces now are leveraging their control to control humanity through different ways. Specifically I don't want to beat up on Google because a single one of these tech companies are guilty in their own right. But what's happening is the same ways and uses of controlling humanity are being played out today but just on a different scale. And what this means is that we are again finding ourselves as humans as individuals being controlled by greater forces beyond us. If humans aren't allowed to get information and spread their free will how are we ever going to become empowered? How are we ever going to head towards the future and really get past what is the level that we're on now? We're never going to have a renaissance to pour on when you can never share what is your thoughts with the rest of society. The problem here is that now these companies are worth more than nation states. These nation states are the ones that created what is the social contracts that we live on today. It's a race to the top and at the top you don't want to give up your control. So a lot of these companies are leveraging that to make sure that they're always in place. And nation states are leveraging their partnerships with these international entities to control their populations. What's at stake? Are we really going to go back to the days when you can't even say shit, fuck, crap, whatever the fuck you want to? Am I going to be charged a token every time I say those kind of things? Like demolition man? Am I going to be threaded and put to jail just because of my thoughts or what I may be thinking for the future? Are we all and we are going to become victims of manipulated media? The pen is still brighter than the sword. So this is why these controlling companies really are fearing the individual freedom of humanity. It's always been about control. But without understanding the individuality and the essence of what is the enlightenment, the Magna Carta, the social contracts that really are the bedrock of our society today, we will not be able to get into what is the future of renaissance 2.0. So it's up to each one of us to take off the blinders and start seeing what is the reality because if we don't we won't understand the true costs of what we're doing and how we are taking the direction of of society and most importantly about empowering the individual and free will. These are part of the bedrocks of the social contract that we live under today. And those very foundations are what are being attacked and eroded daily. What's it going to be? Because if we don't start talking about renegotiating the social contract and weigh things that are happening today others will do the thinking and changing for us and you might not like the outcome that they bring. So it takes us back to the root of the enlightenment the creation of what is the social contract we live under today. Will hemp will cannabis and legalization bring us to the next revolution? I should say industrial revolution or the revolution of free thought and humanity? I believe so. Alright, so entitlements, taxes and payment systems Alright, right now we have not had a national debt this large since World War II. We're in the hole for over $20 trillion that's a crazy amount of money. So on top of that we can't afford all our liabilities meaning Social Security, Medicare Medicaid and depending on how you look at the accounting we could basically be bankrupt by 2030. So when you look at accounting, accounting isn't true. Accounting is how you count numbers and it's very easy to hide things and this is basically what's been going on to breach our social contract and right now politicians are gaining steam for new cohorts based on new ideas to try and, you know, better humanity but you have to find a way to pay for all these things. Not everything. You can't do it for free. So when you have all this debt there's only three ways in economics to get out of it. You inflate, you grow, you tax. Inflation means you print a bunch more money which is basically it lowers the cost of what you have you grow or you have more economic power or you actually produce more stuff or you tax and what's going to happen if we don't do that is essentially you default depending on who you talk to whether it's like a Jim Rickards kind of guy or other economist, what the real game is about is the race to the bottom right now because if it's Japan or the Bank of China or the EU, whoever's going to default first is going to precipitate a larger kind of crisis but that's what you're seeing in all the trade wars going on right now is who's going to push you over the brink first. So we're talking about taxing. That's obviously what's always been sold before. So for example in Colorado, when you look at the whole supply chain, the grower gets taxed going to the retailer and the retailer gets taxed going to the consumer but this isn't going to pay for what it was promised to pay for because what happens is in the 40s and 50s, once all the soldiers came home from World War II, there were promised pensions because legally according to the law that got passed, they couldn't raise rates or you couldn't have a better wage. So what they did is they had these things called fringe benefits where you have social security, you have healthcare and pensions and that's what we can't afford to pay right now and this actually happened in Jersey too where the lottery was created and it was supposed to pay for all the stuff for education and it didn't really end up making that much of a dent at all. So the other side of this too is a war on cash and a war if you if you think back about how can you do actually transactions that you don't want to be traced, it's either with cash or pretty much gold right now and the cannabis market at least that we found was a billion dollar industry which is the biggest cash only market that's untraceable in the world save for elicit markets or black markets and you can't get in the banking system because no one wants to touch the whole KYC and the Know Your Customer and all the regulations that go with it because the banks are so large right now that they'll just essentially cut you out and the banks can do that even on the personal level. So if you read the Term of the Service, if you're checking account, whenever you opened it up, for whatever reason and not tell you just like Facebook or Instagram can cut you off too. So even as an individual, if you have no bank account you can't survive, you can't pay utility bill, you can't function, you can't go to like a check cashing place all the time and drop a W2 or your paychecks off there to kind of make it happen. So all this means that everything gets digital, it's all traceable and therefore it's all taxable and this is what the United States actually does. So there's a thing called the Swift Payment System which is created that countries and big corporations pay each other and Russia and China have actually called to get out of it because the United States put political pressure on Russia after Crimea to try and control them and instead of enforcing hard power with the military or soft power through sanctions, Europe didn't want to do it because they're getting all their energy from Russia. So the US said alright, screw it, we're going to do it this way and this is why if you do the research all these countries are buying crazy amounts of gold right now. So the idea is that they'll default on dollars at some point and say alright, thanks, call me back and then they'll do what's called a collateralized loan based on gold so they'll take the gold and say okay, here's how much we have and now we're going to renegotiate back with a crypto backed SDR. So it will go digital but it's basically going to be a non-country backed social contract. It will be like a world backed money. Renewable energy. We got 15 minutes alright. So looking ahead, there's like 15 people that haven't come online yet and we're here at DEF CON hacking badges and looking at the wifi and what not but there's still half the world is not on the internet yet and we just can't provide the same lifestyle for the whole world that we've been used to with air conditioners and all this power consumption because our energy needs are growing exponentially. And that's the problem. Basically we built this past 150 years industrial revolution on finite instead of renewable and this needs to change. It's very clear. We have garbage patches full of plastic the size of Texas in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Hemp has a unique ability to change that and to empower again nation states humanity to move forward and pass the finite history that we've built are now society on. There's no longer you can't turn away from what is the problems anymore. I mean humanity has made their mark on this planet. This planet is going to be here regardless if we're here or not we need to make a change and we need to choose a direction that is about empowering futures for generations upon generations of generations of humans moving forward. So was the word plastics derived in the wrong way? Was it derived from the wrong materials? Today really hemp allows us to change the way we are impacting our environment in a very unique way because it's a renewable resource and renewable commodity. The beauty of hemp in cannabis is that specifically hemp it can be used to really backstop what is our social contract the dollar. Now how it's being used today as far as legalization goes if you look on Twitter every single politician keeps on pushing out hey farm bill this farm bill that look we got hemp for you. The beauty of it is it literally overnight we can turn a zero or I should say about a billion dollar a year commodity into trillions within a year to three years time. Aside from the economic impact of course the environmental impact of growing all that hemp in cannabis is greatly beneficial aside from aerating soil and all the other important things that it does as far as for the environment it actually cleans the air better than any other plant that exists, period. So in essence why wouldn't we embrace hemp? Why wouldn't we embrace cannabis moving forward? Oil resources are being depleted ironically enough the United States now finds itself as a lead exporter of oil and petrol. Together with cannabis and usurping data this puts the United States and the dollar in a unique position to really float itself into the future. Now what that future will be? God knows but we all can understand that marijuana is going mainstream and the other day my grandma asked if she could get some CBD. I mean that to me, wow. So we find ourselves today where more than half the population here domestically is in favor of legalization of cannabis being the consumable products. Now if you really look at cannabis specifically here in this little diagram over here it's more about cannabis indica sativa. You really get to see the size of cannabis relative to all other cash crops. I mean it dwarfs. I mean all other crops are dwarfed by cannabis. You literally can make 20 times the amount of money growing cannabis on the same plot of land that you could growing corn or soybean. Talk about really empowering our farmers. Marijuana is everywhere. I mean in Los Angeles while presently I just pull up my weed maps. I can see a doctor right next to me. I can get any delivery service. I look at them all it's right at my fingertips. Literally. I don't even have to leave my home. The things can come to me as long as I put the order and actually it's kind of cheaper because you don't have to even deal with any retail space and all that stuff. But really really comes down to cannabis, the smoking, the edibles, the medical side of it is just a fingernail on the body of what is cannabis as a whole and as a cash crop. The golden commodity. I think I should say the nation got a little bit of God I guess back in World War II when they needed hemp. So they actually went from prohibition to 10 years later saying hey go for it guys grow as much hemp as you possibly can. Even Ford got on board. They built cars in 1941 built solely out of hemp. Hemp is 10 times stronger than steel when it's composited material. Hemp can be used as ethanol. Way more efficient than using corn. And what do we find ourselves today? Mercedes-Damler, BMW they're actually making all their new renewable energy conscious cars out of hemp. Hemp really is the building block for our future. It can go into almost anything you can possibly imagine. From lightweight hemp crete to medicines to ethanol to energy uses to plastics you name it. And it's becoming part of mainstream culture as well. I mean this is a screenshot I took from Elle magazine. Elle magazine actually printed a woman in weed article in a whole publication like this one this past month with supplementary web page that literally went through all the nice and neat cool things that cannabis can do for you for the new millennial. But really at Harvard all it's about harvesting liberty. And every company and their mom is getting on this board. Patagonia of course. So really we're getting back to the essence of where we started. And I believe that the world is going to need cannabis in order to spring forward and they're going to need that in order to backstop the social contracts they have with their citizenry. But the beauty of it all is about empowering humanity. And through that is about sharing the free flow of information. Now the antithesis of that is the controlling of that very information and data. Now we're at the precipice of understanding all the secrets of the universe. Here right here is the whole genome sequence of man humans mapped out. Basically what is going to be our future? I mean every company is racing to make sure that they control whatever is their bedrock to wealth. Today we find that is knowledge, data genome sequences. But really in reality if we leverage all this information if we leverage the king commodity and all these commodities together it will take us to the stars and beyond. Imagine being able to populate the billions upon trillions of universes around the world and being powered and being brought there specifically by cannabis. Alright so the social contracts of the future. So we talked about how the dollar is breaking down and everything is being called into question at large. So in order for anything to really improve you really need to have human centered design systems. And if you read any corporate monologue they talk about being customer centric, human centric but they're not really doing that. They're not really looking at what are the unmet needs, how do you solve them simply how do you look at this idea of shared value creation. So as a real simple rule or a kind of model you could look at this idea of simplicity, convenience and trust. So simplicity when you have an unmet need how do you solve it really simply. So like Amazon does this good with like one click, Wikipedia does this with like one click editing, it's literally how do you get rid of as much friction as possible in the system. Convenience is really simple. It's the idea of how do you improve my length of quality of life or how do you give me my time back. At the end of the day your time, your energy your mind and your health, say for your relationships are, you know, your precious resources that you have access to. And lastly it's trust would you actually advocate this to friends and family and are you being consistent along the interaction. So when you do that this is how you actually unlock real novelty and creativity and add value back to society and that's what this is all about is by empowering people to be free to speak their truth and to do things that actually resonate with what is their quintessential being. Thanks. We'll open up the floor to any questions if you have. And I guess with that cannabis is a future. Embrace it. Thanks guys.