 One more Chinese story, you know, in 1978 when Deng Cha-Peng in the early 80s, late 70s, early 80s when Deng Cha-Peng came to power in China, he basically identified the area close to Hong Kong. He made a circle around it and he basically said, I want to see what would happen if we just leave this area in a sense alone. If we allow foreign capital to come in, if we don't regulate it, if we don't control it, if we just let markets function in this area, what will happen? And the consequence was the creation of one of the most dynamic cities in the world, Xinjiang, where a lot of the high tech, Chinese high tech is based, where Apple iPhones are built, or at least one of the places. Anyway, Xinjiang became a city of, I don't know, 12 million. Next to Xinjiang, you've got other Guangzhou, became a massive city of even more than 12 million. Dongguan is another city of 8 to 10 million. Anyway, the whole region exploded with productive activity. Many cities were created out of nothing. Dongguan, there was no city there, Xinjiang, there was no city there. Guangzhou, there was a city that just exploded in terms of size. Look, Xi is trying to mimic this in a sense. He went to a map and he drew a circle around an area not too far from Beijing. Beijing is, the city is too big. It's just so big the infrastructure is failing it. Traffic jams in Beijing are just unbelievable. And he made a circle around this place and he said, we're going to create a new modern dynamic exciting city here. And through massive central planning, a city was built, a city was built in this area. It's supposed to be a high-tech metropolis. It's called Qiong'an, Qiong'an, Qiong'an, something like that, X-I-O-N-G-A-N. It's, well it's not north of Beijing, I'm wrong. It's just south of Beijing. And the idea was to build a city, to build office space, to build residential, and you know, if you build it, they will come. And it would be a model city. It wouldn't have traffic jams, it would be beautifully laid out, it would have parks, it would have everything. And indeed the city has been built. It's massive. It's got all these kind of minion buildings. It's got a whole office park. It's got a whole area for high-tech companies to be in. It's cost. They've spent $85 billion building this city, which is like maybe the most expensive infrastructure project that Chinese have ever engaged in. The only problem with the city is nobody lives there. Nobody lives there. China probably does not need a new city with a population. It's starting to shrink, or it's already shrinking. The reality is that nobody wants the city. Nobody lives in the city. But you know, for Beijing, Beijing University said they're going to relocate to this place. But who knows if that's going to happen, when it's going to happen. There's an amazing high-speed railway station that basically is empty. Nobody goes there. Nobody leaves from there. The streets are empty. The homes are empty. The buildings are empty. Everything is just empty. And this exemplifies the change in China. When Deng was in China, basically, you draw an area and allow freedom there. And then you don't micromanage it. You don't centrally plan it. You let it thrive. And those are the boom years for China, 80s, 90s, and the first decade of the 2000s. Since Xi has come to power, there's been more and more and more control, regulations, central planning. And as a consequence of that control, regulation, and central planning, right? As a consequence of that, you get, you get, you know, you get empty cities. I mean empty cities on a scale we've never seen before. Thank you very much for joining us. Have a good night in China.