 Hello everybody, welcome to the show. So today I want to do something a little bit different. It has come to my attention that there are certain aspects of different videos that I put out that people have asked about in the past or asked about in the present. And it's some things that I think that we all should know. And there's also a lot of questions that come about for these different videos that come up. So I thought, you know, it will be a pretty good idea is just to come in and replay some of those videos. And then as people have questions as they come in, just answer those questions as they roll in in the chat. I think that might be something that could be of value for some people. Now the people that are like, no, I've already seen this or I've already, you know, I already understand that. So for that, it won't be. So this will be like a new aspect of the channel and we'll see how it all works out. So we're going to start with inflation. I think that's a pretty important topic and where it all comes from and how it gets into our system and who is ultimately responsible for that. And we'll take a look at Milton Friedman, who of course Nobel Prize winner for economics. And I think it's good, especially as we get into the whole rigmarole about CPI, of course CPI data and everything else and just to understand that. So we're going to start with this video and then I'm going to ask you where we want to go from here. I personally think it'd be a good idea to take a look at some of the pitfalls of the crypto and digital asset market and all the mistakes that I've made along the way. There was a video we did, which didn't really get a ton of traction. Maybe take a look at that and then also take a look at when I'm selling all my crypto and the indicators that I'm looking at. So these are the things that we'll try to look at moving forward, but this will all be generated by you and what you want to look at. So without further ado, this will be a watch along this video we did, I don't know, a year or so ago. It's about 10 minutes long and then we'll get into Q&A. So let's just jump into the actual video and go from there. So this video can be found on Dan teaches crypto. But again, let's go through this and then when you guys have questions, I'll be monitoring the chats and I'll stop the video if we have to and I'll answer all the questions and we go from there. Let's get to it. Real expert in here and that expert would be Milton Friedman. And he was a American economist and statistician who received the 1976 Nobel Prize for an economic services or sciences for research on consumption analysis, monetary history and theory and the complexity of stabilization policy. So rest assured, this gentleman probably has a pretty good grasp on it. Now, unfortunately, Milton has passed away in 2006. However, there was a great couple of videos that Milton had done and this one really boils it down to the essence of where inflation comes from. So what I want to do is I'm going to just have Milton take it away. He's going to talk to you for about two, two and a half minutes or so. And it really just gets down to the crux of exactly what inflation is, which will set us up for a little bit more deeper discussion moving forward. The reason we have inflation in the United States or for that matter anywhere in the world is because these pieces of paper and the accompanying book entries or their counterparts in other nations are growing more rapidly than the quantity of goods and services produced. The truth is inflation is made in one place and one place only here in Washington. This is the only place where there are presses like this that turn out these pieces of paper we call money. This is a place where the power resides to determine how rapidly the amount of money shall increase. Before every election, our representatives would like to make us think we're getting a tax break. And they're able to do it while at the same time actually raising our taxes because of a bit of magic they have in their kit bag. That magic is inflation. They reduce the tax rates, but the taxes we have to pay go up because we are automatically shoved into higher brackets by the effect of inflation. A neat trick taxation without representation. What happened to all that noise? That's what would happen to inflation if we stopped letting the amount of money grow so rapidly. This is not a new idea. It's not a new cure. It's not a new problem. It's happened over and over again in history. Sometimes inflation has been cured this way on purpose. Sometimes it's happened by accident during the Civil War. The North late in the Civil War overran the place in the south where the printing presses were setting up, where the pieces of paper were being turned out. Prior to that point, the South had a very rapid inflation. If my memory serves me right, something like 4% a month. It took the Confederacy something over two weeks to find a new place where they could set up their printing presses and start them going again. During that two week period, inflation came to a halt. After the two week period, when the presses started running again, inflation started up again. It's that clear, that straightforward. I can't make any more clear than that. It's that clear, it's that straightforward. The narrative has changed quite a bit. We've had it say that the reason for inflation is because of this once-in-a-generation pandemic. We've also heard stories about that the reason for inflation is because of the war between Russia and Ukraine. But as we just saw, it didn't seem like the war has really slowed us down as far as the Civil War. We'll really take a look at and we just take a look at the M1 money supply. First of all, what is the M1 money supply? It is beginning May 2020. M1 consists of currency outside the U.S. Treasury, federal reserve banks in the vaults of depository institutions, demand deposits at commercial banks, and other liquid deposits consisting of OCBs and saving deposits, including money market deposit accounts. You can just see that in 2020, we did a heck of a lot of printing as far as money goes. Then we take a look at the M2, which is, of course, consists of M1 plus small denomination time deposits, time deposit amount of less than 100,000 less IRA, and two balances in retail MMFs, less IRA and balances at MMFs. We're going to see that still we have quite an increase in the monetary supply moving forward. Again, if we just look back to what Milton Friedman was talking about, we can clearly see that the real reason is just because of money printing. That's about it. The next thing that I will say is that there is a problem with all this money printing, especially towards the top. This is where we get aced out of a lot of the benefits. What I'm talking about is the Cantalon effect. If you don't know Cantalon effect, if we take a look at it, it's a change in relative prices resulting from a change in money supply, which we just talked about. It is the uneven expansion of the amount of money, and that's the base of it. But there was also another theory by Cantalon. You had a theory in which the beneficiaries of the state creating the currency is based on the institutional setup of that state, meaning he who was close to the king and the wealthy likely benefited from the distributed choices of currency through the system. It's clear that the case of the U.S. capital markets, many of the major U.S. banks, large private equity houses in Wall Street, are far better. Staffordy Central Bank, QV or Quantitative Easing are printing money measures while individual U.S. savers often witness jumps in inflation in various goods and services. To make this crystal clear, this is the best I can do, which is the Cantalon effect is here in plain sight in a nice little graphic where the money printer goes burr, the Fed gives out or the Treasury gives out a ton of money to big banks and other bank banks and people across that way that are at the very top of the food chain, and what do they do? They go out and they spend that new money. Of course, that doesn't come down to us. And of course, later a year or two later, then we hear about inflation. Think about it as like a house. If houses were on average 200,000, and then of course all the big banks got just a ton of money or a bunch of different institutions got a ton of money to spend on it. Well, they'd probably buy up a lot of those houses, which would cause the price of those houses to then go up. And then of course, that would ace out the retail investor or just the average Joe and Jane like you and me. And the problem then is that we get priced out of the market until everything crashes down. Of course, once that happened, these guys would just be back at it again. So if that isn't clear enough, I will just say like this, the 10 richest men doubled their fortunes in the pandemic. Of course, we're talking about coronavirus, all the income of 99% of humanity fell. If these 10 men were to lose 99.99% of their wealth tomorrow, it would still be richer than 99% of all the people on this planet and now have six times more wealth than the poorest 3.1 billion people. And I'm not here to talk negatively about the free markets. I'm just saying that there's quite a lot of benefits for people on the higher end of the food chain and that would be the cantileum effect. And we can see this, of course, very clearly in inflation as it goes up. This is app.trueflation.com. There'll be a link below and you can find it. This just takes 30 different data points, uses chain link to pull in real-time data. And this is what we have for the United States. We had quite a bit, even though we thought it was 8.5%, that's what the government reported. But in actuality, we can see it's actually almost 12% on March and we've come down as drone power on the Federal Reserve had made the base increases. However, that's just the USA. Take a look at the UK, not so well. And there is some other type of rumblings. They might be going up to 14%, 15%, 18%. So, first of all, can everybody hear me? Because I don't know when I move these around, if this works out or if I have to stop the other tab. I always forget about this one. So, first of all, can everybody hear me in the live stream? Loud and clear, fantastic. So, isn't it amazing when we take a look at this and everybody's kind of going back and forth. Some people say this might be a oversimplification. But, and of course, yes, fractional reserve lending is an actual real thing with the banks. And of course, we can also see some inflation go up with that. But everything starts, everything starts, everything starts with the US government. Okay. If they weren't, and let me just bring this up real quick. Oh, I can't show it to you. Well, I can. I mean, all you got to do is do a quick search for the M2 money supply. You can look for that on Ben's site or any other site that's out there. And when you're printing out trillions and trillions of dollars, sure banks can do all those things. But what do you think most of the inflation is coming from? Of course, what do you think most of the thing is actually happening, which is at the top, and we're talking about the cantillon effect. So I can see where this is. And I will say that when we did this video all this time ago, I know that people are very upset with the Fed and they think that they cut rates too much. Maybe they did, maybe they didn't. But they're going to pause, I believe, on November 1st. But just remember just how high the inflation actually was. I mean, we were, gosh, 8.5%, 9.2% somewhere around there. And we're taking a look at here as far as true inflation goes and how much it really was based on what the real economic factors were. And we can see that, in all honesty, we did a pretty good job of bringing it down. Does that mean that we're not feeling that effect and everything is hunky-dory? No. But I can say that with inflation, yes, it sucks. But I mean, imagine how bad it would have been if they never would have raised rates. Maybe I don't think it would have gone down, but I can see there's actually some positivity. So I just wanted to talk about that. Now let's finish up with a video and then we'll get into the Q&A and go from there. I'm going to bring this back. I'm going to bring all these things we just talked about with Milton Freeman, the M1 money supply that can't tell in effect. I just need you to think about assets. And one of the assets that I invest into, one, not solely, is Bitcoin. And to make this crystal clear, if you had $20 in 1980, you could buy a heck of a lot of groceries and it would work out pretty well. But in the year 2000, not as much. In 2022, the $20 that you may have paid for a whole basket doesn't really get you too much. Trust me, I know. I've been in the supermarket. I'm not getting too much of $20. However, think about Bitcoin. In Bitcoin in 2011, you know which one Bitcoin costs in 2011? $20, roughly. And that could have got you the same amount of groceries. You know how much one Bitcoin in 2021 could have gotten you? A car, a decent car, not just a junk car, but actually a pretty nice one. And who knows what will be in 2030? But there is one thing that is for sure. And there is quite a bit of price appreciation as opposed to the US dollar. So that is it for today. I just want to make that quick video to talk about what inflation is, where it comes from, and kind of set the narrative straight so there's not any kind of tomfoolery or people going, no, no, no, it's this or it says that. There's one place that happens in a certain area that's Washington politicians. Anyhow, by today's video, give it a thumbs up. I would really appreciate that. Also consider subscribing, but that is it for today's video. So thanks so much. And that's it. So these are the things that I want to want to move forward. Now, just let me know what you think about this whole process. You think like this could be a value. You can stop by and we can do Q&A or you think like, I've already seen these things and we move on. I'm sure that'll be a nice little talking point in the comment section. But that is it for that piece. So first of all, thanks everybody for stopping by. I appreciate it. Like this video, thumbs up and subscribe. All that good stuff. Now we'll get into the Q&A. I'll answer all your questions to the best of my abilities. And then also at the top of the hour, actually have an interview with Stefan Rust, who is the CEO of Truflation. So that'll probably come out today in our other live stream that we'll do later on. And let me know if you guys have any questions for him. And we'll go over that. But if not, let's jump into a little Q&A. Ben's chair says, if you don't like, hit the like button. I will sit on you. Total role reversal. That's pretty good. Let's see. What have we got? Rob looks to be channel's inner Milton. Yes. Got the glasses on today. Shannon Miller says, Genesis halts withdrawals if your court orders to pay $175 million to FTX. This isn't the first time Genesis has stopped withdrawals, right? Let me see. Genesis. I got to tell you that court case is really opening up a lot of people's eyes to just how bad things were. Yeah, look at this. Here, let me show you. I probably want to see my screen, right? Let's see. This was from, this is not the first time. This is from November 16, 2022. Genesis global halts withdrawals, starting unprecedented market turmoil. So, is Genesis still up and running? I guess it was. But yeah, expect some more problems as all the information comes out. It would be interesting to see how that corresponds because Genesis, correct me if I'm wrong on the comment section, the Genesis global was part of the umbrella under Grayscale. And also, I think Grayscale, either owner or part owner of Cointelegraph or, let me see. I always forget. Grayscale and Cointelegraph. That's not right. There is the digital currency group. That's who owns it. Let me see. Let me share everything. Here we are. Digital currency group, portfolio. What do they own? Again? Oof. Hope these guys don't go down. Abra, Aquila, Enno Labs, Arcane. They own Big Time too. Oof. Bitco, Big Chain, Bitzo, BitPay. Geez, please. This is their portfolio. This is what they invested into. Hold on. It's not like they own them straight out. They changed some things here. Not just because they're investors. It doesn't mean that everything goes down. But I remember it being a tighter portfolio. One of those being Grayscale and a couple other ones. Oh well. Oh well. Let's hope it all works out. Huh? Aimee, this is DCA and walk away. It's a pretty good idea. There's just some that you really, you can't do that. Like, there was a project, like there's these, just these upgrades and these projects that were an ERC-20 token and they transferred over and became their own token like Orion and then things that are going on with Gala and so on and so forth. Some of those projects, you have to be aware of what's happening so you can transfer everything over and be a part of the process and not get everything screwed over. That's the problem. That's why I like, like if you just DCA Bitcoin, usually doing pretty well because, you know, as long as you don't leave it on the exchange, right? Aimee says, cannot discuss the impact of corporations jumping on the inflation bag when they're going to take advantage of opportunity to raise prices, case in point food prices, case in point oil. You know, if we, the production of crude oil as it comes over and of course different nations that export that oil, you have to take a look at the oil producing companies or other refineries and just see, well, how much does it actually cost you guys to refine the oil to ship it over, to get it to the places? And what is your cost basis? Because if it's just an issue of you just wanted to raise prices and of course that just gets passed on to the consumer, how much revenue is it? But again, it's a free market, I still believe, right? Let's see. Oil to the moon are going to get ripped off. A. Ravi were planning to do a deeper dive on algo, not right now. Yes. Yes, thank you. I hope so. Best platforms for DCA? I use Coinbase. Seems to work out okay. I know if you're in Canada, apparently that's one of the few options you have now is everything, all the sexes get out, all the centralized exchanges are leaving. Not all of them, but. Ah, thank you. DCG owns Coin Desk. I was going to say confused, Coin Telegraph and Coin Desk. Yeah. Yeah. Bobby Shouts has just got my settlement check from Voyager from Citizens Bank. I won't sue it away because it looked like junk mail. Everyone looked for it. Some other thing. So of course, Voyager, we all lost money. Did we not? Well, not everybody. Some people pulled it out when I told, there's a link in the description, a timeline of Celsius and Voyager. And one of the videos I put out was two weeks prior to Voyager going down. I know people will say, Ravi talked about it all the time. Yes. I thought it was a good company. And it was great until it wasn't, until we figured out the public disclosures because they were a publicly traded company like they gave $620 million to three hours capital uncollateralized. When I found that out, I put out a video and said, hey, something wrong here. He probably should take some money off. And then that's when I did the rules. Don't leave anything on exchanges and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, right? He was cold storage devices. And this would have come back to what Mayweather said, which is DCA and walk away. It's a great strategy, but you can't. In non-encrypto, you got to actually, you know, your DCA and then every week at least, you got to start to at least take all your crypto off those exchanges. So anyhow, back to the whole thing is there's going to be a check. I got like 20 bucks. Woo. And everybody in Voyager should have gotten like 35.8%, be able to take off to get back their funds, which still sucks. Anyhow, live and learn. Now, yeah. I remember you recommended to take your money out. Yeah, I just wish we could have done it sooner, but yeah, well, somebody did. Thanks for the video. I took your advice and pulled out. The only thing that was left, stuff I couldn't pull off, my check was only four bucks. See you there. Pretty good. Yeah. Yep, yep, yep. You remember WeWork, Inc., the Uber of offices. I do. And that guy is a part of another company that's going to become public. So we'll see. If you're in Canada, Bull Bitcoin, I don't know, is that a centralized exchange? Sounds pretty cool. Why does the Fed never come in an overspending or printing? Same reason why there's just a hole in the budget and how much is being printed and how much gets lost in the Pentagon. I think there was a great back and forth between John Stewart and, let me see, like this one. Let me play this one. This is pretty good. Present this one here. Listen to this. This is John Stewart. Any questions of the Defense Deputy Secretary? Because apparently they lost almost a trillion, just lost, they just misplaced a trillion dollars. Listen to this. These are unfair questions of somebody within a department of that size and scope. Did you feel that it's somewhat unfair? I think you're having a particular thing you really want to talk about and you're asking me other questions, but I don't think it's unfair to ask me about the audit. It's absolutely the case that the United States military should be able to pass an audit, and we've got to be on that pathway to get there. But don't you think that that does speak to the larger point that we're trying to get at, which is good journalism uncovers corruption? Good journalism doesn't cover corruption, but I'm not sure these two things are linked. Oh, but they are. Okay, so you need to explain to me, do you understand what an audit does and the degree to which it is linked to the question that you're asking? I believe so. Okay, go ahead. Give me your explanation. No, I don't mind learning. So what I would suggest is that the audit that they have in the military doesn't really look at whether or not there's efficacy. It's just whether they got delivered the thing that they ordered. That is any audit. That is any audit. That is true. But generally those audits aren't $400 billion for Raytheon and $1.7 trillion for a plane that doesn't seem to be doing it. There is a lot of waste, fraud, and abuse within a system. Audits and waste, fraud, and abuse are not the same thing. So let's decompose these things. Please educate me on what's going on. Sure. So an audit is exactly what you just described, which is, do I know what was delivered to which place? The ability to pass an audit or the fact that the DOD has not passed an audit is not suggestive of waste, fraud, and abuse. That is completely false right there. So now it's a question of, it's suggestive that we can't, we don't have an accurate inventory that we can pull up of what we have where. That is not the same as saying we can't do that because waste, fraud, and abuse has occurred. So in my world, that's waste. How is that waste? If I give you a billion dollars and you can't tell me what happened to it, that to me is wasteful. That means you are not responsible. But if you can't tell me where it went, then what am I supposed to think? And when there has been reporting, this is not, look, I'm not saying this is on you and that you caused this. But I think it's a tough argument to make that. I'm pretty sure you can cause it. An $850 billion budget to an organization that can't pass an audit and tell you where that money went. Like, I think most people would consider that somewhere in the realm of waste, fraud, or abuse because they would wonder why that money isn't well accounted for. Yeah. So I hope that answered your question. Yeah, the government likes to do that. What are you going to do? That's your tax dollars work. That's what I can always say. Ah, let's see here. Bring that back. Over here. Well, maybe. But nothing's really changed. We shouldn't be too surprised about that. That's okay. Remember, control the things that you can control and don't worry about the things that you can't. Ah, let's see. One hundredth of an occasion. Who knows? There was a good question about XRP. Where to go? Did they check the couch? That's a good point. $850 billion could be there. What do you think happens now with more conflict around the world? I don't know if there's, it's like the world is in perpetual motion with violence. It just seems like there's now more atrocities that are happening all over the world, especially in the Middle East. I don't know what's going to happen there. Again, I'm not geopolitical experts and I will not weigh in on that because there's tons of experts everywhere. You can find them all on Twitter too. Ah, here we go. Right, Panda. Rob, you were the news that XRP labs move 15 million value of XRP and bit stamps. I just want to see if we have more insight into this. No, I didn't know about that. But I mean, 15 million. That's not $850 billion like we saw. Let's see. Let's see what you today says. Two transactions. 54 million XRP, total of 23 million worth. Oh, okay, okay. 54 million XRP worth, 11 million. 502,000. Or if that's just a whale, because it's from Whale Alert, let's see what the price action does. Hey, 24 hours is up 0.7%, not bad. I guess it would depend on if that was from a cold wallet or if it was just from an exchange to an exchange. But usually when you move things from a wallet to an exchange, you don't do it because, you know, for giggles, you usually do that for a sell-off. But we'll see. I'm not sure. Looking forward to hearing Robin Ben's debating the merits of DCA in the prehabbing year, hopefully in XNFI. It'd be the same thing we always talk about. Ben does not get into it because he's like, I think there's more of a downside. And, you know, he's been right from 2022. There was a little bull run here for like, for Bitcoin. You know, it went from 16,000 at the end of the year. And now it rallied up to 30, and now we're back to like 26, 27. And then also Solana, but everything else. I mean, have the alts done really well? Not really. I mean, they've been actually quite poor. I think they're going to do very poor moving forward. I don't see us really, that's, that's the thing. Because Ben is, he has his, the idea, and he's been right so far. It's not great to get into alts because it's just going to bleed against Bitcoin. So far, has he been wrong? No. And then I don't think we're going to see any kind of massive price appreciation until after the halving, which is coming up in April or May of 2024. I don't believe that. It just depends on, I don't know when the bottom is, and I'm not for sure. I see there's probably some more negativity and some more reduction in price action as time goes on, especially with what's going on with the uncertainty in the Middle East. And who knows if that's going to lead to, you know, a peace treaty or World War three? Who knows? And of course, the markets don't really like that. So, yeah, expect more price depreciation moving forward. And if you're looking at your portfolio and going, man, I'm down, you know, just take a look. My portfolio is down as well. I don't really, if it wasn't for those Sunday shows, I wouldn't really care about it. But of course, as it goes down, it was the same thing that happened to me in 2018 and 2019. I was doing the whole thing, but then it's amazing how one year can change all that, and that was 2021. And it worked out pretty well. The thing is you can wait and not do it and just lump some in or you can dollar-cost average or you can dynamic dollar-cost average. We talk about those things on Sunday. It just depends on what you want to do and what your risk tolerance is. Me personally, I follow my rules that I put out. I don't just put them out to waste my breath. Jon Stewart is it. You know, these, where I say it's all gone, I'd never invest more than I can afford to lose because I don't freak out when I look at my portfolio and go, oh my God, I'm down X percentage on, you know, Pepe coin, sweet Marion Joseph. I shouldn't have sold my house for that. And yeah, I'm just waiting. And I don't know if it's the 2024 or five or six. I don't know yet. Let's see. And Jon, hello, Ron. Hello, first time here. I'm just a holder. Ron, you're in good company. We're most of us are holders. Welcome to this show. This is a different show. Usually we go over like the day's events, which we'll probably go over later in the next stream. But today it was just a recap of where inflation is, where it comes from. We took a look at Milton Friedman. The Economist, Sean Slattery. Good question. What do you say about link, Rob? I've always liked link besides it's being down 70% from top. I believe it will hit and pass the all-time late-2094. I don't know where it's going to go. But I know it actually has utility. And in 10 minutes when I talk to Stefan Rust, the CEO of Trueflation, we'll get into, you know, how they're using chain link as an oracle. Also on top of that, you have to understand for the tokenization of real-world assets or RWAs, all those places have to use some type of oracle. Now, there's other types of oracles besides chain link, but that's pretty much the winner so far right now. And of course, they also have a partnership where they're working exclusively with Swift as they move things around and try to bring Swift out of the 1970s into the 2020s as they're moving funds around. So I think chain link is a great play. And it's actually one of the, how to say it, it's one of the few cryptos out there that has real-world utility right now and is being used as a real-world utility asset. I like chain link and I got a cost average every day. Richard says, Rob, those glasses are 10 years. That's great because I feel old today. Back hurts. Arthritis. I have glasses on. If I didn't invest more than I got for to lose it, I have no investments. That's a gambler right there, golfer. Yes, ARP will. Shalan says chain link is awesome. Still has a more link that will hit the market, only 5% total supply in the market. That's a good question. You know what we should do? Let's take a look at the unlock schedules. First of all, did you know if you go to CoinGecko, click on chain link, and there's a tab here called tokenomics. Look at that. You can find out the link initial allocation. You know there's 35% for the token. That's pretty good. Node operators is 35% and company gets 30. That's a big chunk, but hey, what are you going to do? So you've got a sweet clearing supply of $558 million. Total supply is $1 billion. Max supply is $1 billion. Let's take a look at unlocks. There's a website called token.unlocks.app. Well, that sucks. It doesn't even have it. Let's do this. Chain link token unlock schedule. See what it is. They revised it. 7% of links total supply will be released in a circulation between Q2 2023 and Q120 over. So you've got 7% that's going to be put on the market. But, if you understand that some of that will actually go for staking. Some of that will be sold by the company, I would assume so, and some of that maybe goes to market makers, not for sure. So, we've got a little better anyhow. But those are three places to find it. Interesting. Oh, good points. This is the last one that I've got to get out of here. Good morning, Rob. We see the SEC actually coming up with new reasons to deny the grayscale ETF today. No, but it would be interesting to see what they do. This is their last day to go against because of the decision that was recently made for the grayscale court case with the SEC. So this is the last day for the SEC to appeal that decision. If they don't appeal the decision, a lot of people are saying that that is Gary raising the white flag and giving the go-ahead for the spot Bitcoin ETF by BlackRock and Fidelity and host of others. So we'll see what happens today. Today is the last day. I'm not going to give my prediction because who knows, it's Gary's world. We're just living in it. So everybody, thanks much for stopping by. I got to get out of here, I got a little interview and then I'll see you guys on the next one, which we'll see if it's today or tomorrow. Oh, there is one last thing. This is the last this day is the 13th, right? 13th. Today's the last day to enter in for the sweat coin giveaway. We're giving away 100,000 sweat and that's going to be 5,020 people plus we're going to give away 10 NFTs. There is a link that I will put into the comments section and also there's a link in the description where all you got to do is follow me in sweat economy, retweet it and then enter to win for that job form and I'll give that away tomorrow on Saturday's live stream. So that'll be, see, 30 people total wins and that's it for today. Alright everybody, so thanks so much for stopping by, got to get out of here, I'm thinking I'll be late, but I'll see you on the next one. Adios.