 I was going to start with this incredible positive story out of Argentina. I mean, I had been cautiously optimistic about Millet from the beginning, and I was a little worried, I have to admit, early on because he seemed to be hiring for his cabinet, people who were more middle of the road than he was, less radical than he was. And I was worried about his willingness and ability, well, I'm still worried about ability, but his willingness to be radical and to do what was necessary to truly liberate the economy and society more broadly, again, given that he was hiring and putting in cabinet positions people who I do not think necessarily shared his radicalism. But he came, he gave a speech yesterday, and he listed his program for the next few days, which both executive orders and a legislative program, which was truly inspiring, and much better than anything I would have expected, particularly the speech itself, the economic program we'll see, and a lot of this has to be approved by parliament, which is not going to be easy. But the speech was fantastic. He basically blamed Argentina's problems on decades of collectivism. He used that name, he used that term, collectivism. Collectivism was at fault. And what was needed was more individualism, was more focused on the individual, liberty and freedom. I mean, this was one of the most philosophical talks I've ever seen a politician give. It was inspiring, and he was surrounded by, I guess, cabinet ministers. He was reading, the talk was obviously had been prepared in writing, so he wasn't his usual crazy all over the place yelling and throwing things chainsaw style. This was a very presidential, and the press doesn't know what to do with him. First of all, almost all the reports and the speech only deal with the changes in the economic policy. They don't talk about the content of the speech, the philosophical context of the speech or anything like that. The focus is exclusively on the program. They've stopped, interestingly enough, most of the media that I've seen, at least with regard to this, stopped comparing him to Trump and Bolsonaro, because clearly he's no Trump and Bolsonaro. He's thoughtful, he's articulate, he's reading his speech as well, and he has an agenda, a clear and equivocal agenda, so they're starting to call him a libertarian. They're just calling him a libertarian, which is not what was happening when he was elected. It was the far-right, Trump-like candidate. So this is fantastic what he's doing, how he's presenting it is more important than actually what he's doing. He's presenting it as undoing of collectivist policies, decades worth of collectivist policies using that term. I love it. I love it. It's philosophical. It goes to the heart of it. It goes to the essence of it. He's not coming across as a crazy anarchist. He's working within the law. He's asked the Congress, the Argentinian parliament to come into emergency session to go over to approve the things that need approving. Some of this stuff is just going to be passed by executive order, where he has the authority to do it. He's not acting as an authoritarian. Now whether he can get it through Congress, we'll see. I think he has the momentum. So far, there's been one demonstration in the streets about him. He did pass a law that was criticized by, again, the mainstream media, that banned demonstrations that obstructed people's lives. So he banned demonstrations that obstructed traffic and obstructed the ability of regular Argentinians to live their lives. Media has been riddled with demonstrations when people have tried to do better things like Marci, six, seven years ago. So he's learned the lesson. He's banning it. We'll see if he can actually implement that ban and what it will take. So far, so good. Now some of the things he announced, he's talking about a modernization of labor legislation to facilitate the real creating of jobs. So getting rid of a lot of labor regulations. He's talking about deregulating the industries that like tourism, pharmaceuticals, wine production, and maybe most importantly, foreign trade. He's eliminating many of the barriers to export. Argentina plays barriers. Most countries place barriers for imports, Argentina barriers for export. All in the name of rebuilding the country and in a sense starting from scratch, getting rid of a lot of the rot that is accumulated over decades and decades. We'll see. People, the politicians in Argentina are already saying that deregulation decrees are unconstitutional. And that he has no power to repeal these laws, the ones that he's done for executive order. And again, he's going to face a real opposition in the parliament. But I think he has momentum. Again, they haven't been that many demonstrations. He won by a big margin in the election. The people in a sense have spoken. And it's great. I mean, this is part of the speech. He says, that doctrine that they call leftism, communism, fascism, or socialism. I love that he puts them all together, right? And that we call collectivism. I mean, just that is a revolution. So that doctrine that they call leftism, communism, fascism, or socialism, and that we call collectivism is a way of thinking that dilutes the individual in favor of the power of the state. It is based on the premise that the reason of the state is more important than the individual. That the individual must submit to the state. And that therefore citizens owe obedience to their representatives, the political cast. He said in the speech, they rejected the doctrine that politicians are God. Not only are they not God, but they are the cause of our problems. He said it was wrong that a, quote, group of bureaucrats can plan the lives of human beings. So the only reason I can read you this is that this is from the Buenos Aires Times, which has a long article in this that actually cites him. None of the US publications, most have ignored the speech. And those who did cite him, just a list of the programs he wants, just a list of the programs he wants, he also said, these are forms of which I have only mentioned 30 of the more than 300 included are some of those complemented in the decree. So seven laws will be struck down by decree, so eliminated, the laws will be eliminated. And that includes laws governing rental or private properties, i.e., rent control, and supply of items at supermarkets. I have no idea what that law is, but it's going away, which sounds fantastic. So yeah, I mean, super exciting details, we'll still find out, but here's some of the things. The decree is decreeing that all state-owned companies be prepared for privatization, authorize the shareholder control of the Argentinian Airlines to be partly or completely transferred to private parties. He's going to deregulate satellite internet services to allow SpaceX's Starlink to operate in Argentina. He's going to eliminate price controls and prepaid health care plans. He's going to eliminate the monopoly of tourism agencies to deregulate the sector, repeal the current rent law that limits price increases in a bit to normalize the real estate market, repeal the current land law that limits ownership of land by foreigners in a bit to promote investments. I mean, that's a shocker. He's actually going to allow foreigners to own land in Argentina. I mean, even in the US, that's controversial, right? He's going to scrap the current supply law that allows the government to set minimum and maximum prices and profit margins for goods and services of private companies. He's going to eliminate the economy ministry's price observatory to avoid the persecution of companies. I mean, anytime you have repeal, repeal, repeal, I love it. Imagine a US president coming in and saying, OK, here are the laws I'm going to repeal. Here are the laws I'm going to work with Congress to repeal, not Obamacare without offering anything or not even succeeding doing that. But imagine, I mean, this isn't Trump. This isn't Bolsonaro. This isn't anybody we are familiar with. I mean, maybe Thatcher at her best, but I didn't. And Thatcher, of course, actually, Thatcher made some pretty philosophical speeches. So Thatcher was good in the strike. But there's nobody in the US. And Thatcher wasn't as aggressive as this and wasn't as definitive, and this is just the first step, and this is just 30 of 300 that he plans to do. And yeah, I think it's really exciting, really, really revolutionary. This is not just a tinkering with the economy. This is not just mealy-mouthed, you know, a few changes here and there. This is this is real. This is real. So good for me. Lay. Good for Argentina. Pack your bags, guys. You might bags, guys. You might be moving to Argentina soon. Maybe that's where the future is. But yeah, I'm excited. I want to see what comes next and I want to see how it's implemented and I'm excited to go to Argentina and to experience some of this firsthand. I'm hoping that part of the South American trip is going to include in March, April, April, is going to include a visitor to Argentina.