 Next question is from Ty Finnecombe. Here's a scenario. The president appoints mind pump media to address the country's obesity epidemic. What's the first issue you tackle and how do you approach it? Oh geez. Presidential order. I know these questions are so funny because it's like you are the, you know, you make all the decisions. You can pass a law that will fix everything. It's good though, because I already know how I think you guys are gonna answer too because I'm sure a lot of people think about this and I think a lot of people, you know, okay, we have this huge problem. So let's get in there and start making these rules. Let's get rid of sodas, or let's start taxing it this way or so. And what I know that both these guys are gonna say is probably very similar to me, which is I probably do close to nothing, to be honest with you. And that's just- Be the example. And here's what I might do, right? I would, if I could think of something that's not going to take anybody's rights or liberties away or freedoms away, I would now make part of every high school health curriculum, a mine pump is part of it. So I'll- Little crony capitals, am I? Self-surveying. Well, Adam's president. Yeah, yeah, yeah. He's gonna make mine pump. Well, let's pretend, okay, and then at that point, because I'm a president and I have all kinds of other pool, I'm not really worried about mine pump making money, so then I make it a non-profit, right? So then, so there's no, so you can take the crony cap, so you can take the crony capitalism out because I'm no longer profiting from- Like a good politician, man. Yeah, you like that? So we're non-profit at this point because we're now the president, so yes, it's a mandatory part of all health curriculum is listening to the show, Mine Pump, and getting some of that information. Other than that, I'm not gonna put any sort of regulation or laws or taxes on anything to try and fight obesity. I think it's a terrible way. It never works. So I know exactly what I would do and it's not about what I would do, it's what I would undo. I would eliminate subsidies. I would eliminate subsidies for food and food products. So I'm gonna give you an example of how subsidies have caused problems, okay? Corn, corn is one of the most highly subsidized foods in America. So at some point, the government convinced people that it was in our best interest to take tax money and automatically fund farmers to grow corn, right? We need corn, it's a good idea. It's a good crop. Let's take tax dollars and put it towards corn. So what was the result of that? Well, corn became extremely inexpensive, even though we are paying for it, but we're forced to pay for it. Farmers grew corn more than anything else. Sugarcane went out of business and the way we sweetened all of our foods was with high fructose corn syrup. In fact, corn subsidies got so bad, we started talking about making corn into fuel, which is interesting. Let's take food and turn it into gas. It's a very strange proposition. We have subsidies for wheat. We have subsidies for dairy. We have subsidies for all kinds of... Eliminate the subsidies, because those cause ripple effects in the market that skew the food and what it's really valued at and what we eat a lot of. One of the main reasons why wheat, corn, and soy is in almost every processed food that there is is because those are subsidized crops. And so now we have food that has all of those things in them. So it would be less about what I would do, like add. It's more about what I would take away. That's a good one. And then the second thing, I would just talk a lot about health and fitness as the president. Yeah, well, honestly, when I think about these types of issues, I go all the way back down to childhood. So my thoughts start gathering around education, around what kids are exposed to through their school, through their extracurricular activities, and just to create more opportunities for them to get exposed to better information and to have these opportunities to move a lot more throughout the day as they're learning and have those types of curriculums incorporated somehow within the structure. So to really evaluate how the entire school system, I guess, if we're still gonna stick with it and it's not gonna still be all online forever, if this is something that is still sort of standardized to kind of reevaluate that in terms of updating everything to the latest information and also get kids to really understand their body and pay attention to their body and have professionals come in and do talks and those types of things just so that at least, not to say that they're gonna follow all these things, but at least they've been exposed to it to know a good example because I think the biggest issue is, parents usually are the biggest example and I think a lot of parents out there are just not cutting it. Well, I'll tell you what, I can only think of one, I can think of one government thing that has improved our health and that was the campaign against tobacco. And I mean, a broken clock will be right twice a day. So they did have success with that. It did, I think, play a role in the reduction in tobacco use, but everything else that they've done to improve our health has actually made our health worse. Creating the food pyramid made it worse, demonizing fat, and that was a big government production, right? That caused a lot of worse health. Subsidizing crops that we thought were a good idea, that there's a reason why- Stattons and cholesterol, right? There's a reason why corn fed beef is so cheap, it's because the corn is subsidized and so now it's cheaper. Now, how do you compete that with grass fed meat, for example? So I think one of the best things you could ever do is if you were a leader like that, is to lead by example, talk and persuade, and then get out of the way, like get out of the way and redo and get rid of all these programs that have really only caused unintended consequences which has resulted, and I can make this argument pretty sound, have resulted in worse health, not in better health.