 Brandon asked, is a recession triggered by Fed raising rates better than a recession that would be caused by trade or other factors that would increase the bubble? No, I don't think you can say some recessions are better based on what triggers them. Recessions are going to be determined by how deep they are and some of that is going to depend on Fed behavior. So a lot of how deep a recession is, how long a recession is, how quickly we recover from a session, how we recover, the nature of the recovery, the extent of the recovery. To a large extent all of that is determined by the Fed behavior. So, you know, part of the reason that the great recession was as deep and as nasty as it was was because the Fed miscalculated, completely screwed up, completely messed up. I've often said, I don't think they have a choice. They almost always screw up and because they there's no market for them to be able to tell what to do. But they particularly screwed up at the great recession. You know, Bernanke will be remembered ultimately as a bad chairman of the Federal Reserve, not as the hero he wants us to believe he is. And the Great Depression was caused to a large extent. So a recession that was caused by trade, a recession that was caused by trade and by a slowdown in production and consumption, ultimately turned into great depression because of the Fed, because not the Fed raised interest rates, but it contracted the money supply by other means. So the Fed has various means in which it contracts the supply of money. And when it does that into a recession, like it did in the Great Recession and it did in the Great Depression, you get worse recessions that need to be. Now, of course, the real problem is that by the Fed's very existence and by it raising lowering interest rates, expanding the money supply, shrinking the money supply and so on, it's constantly distorting the market and creating bubbles, but creating malinvestment, creating investment in things that shouldn't be invested in, jobs where there shouldn't be jobs, no jobs where there should be jobs. It distorts the entire economy and it makes it very difficult for rational people to actually plan for the future and to invest and to produce for the future. And I think ultimately where the United States economically is heading, it's really economically the United States is heading towards stagnation. I don't see us heading towards a massive cliff and complete destruction. I see us much more as heading towards kind of a Japan outcome where we're just flat and just stagnating and very little is happening and that creates social unrest and more authoritarianism and political mayhem. So, to me, that is the great risk is the real stagnation. There is a woman who values his life and who does not want to give in to today's cult of despair, cynicism and impotence and does not intend to give up the world to the dark ages and to the role of the collectivist broads.