 Next question is from Christy Bliss Garcia. Sal often says evolutionarily speaking. So I'm curious if you think it's possible that humans could evolve to safely consume McDonald's type of food daily and require less exercise. You know, it's funny. I've actually really thought about that like long and hard and considered the possibilities of like what we're going because you got to remember that, you know, we're, this is a small time right now. This 50 to 100 years of processed foods and what we're dealing with with all the, you know, it will humans 100 years from now be able to handle all this terrible food and we'll have enough generations. We look like fat amoebas. That's how we'll evolve to it. I don't think biologically we will and here's why. So if you, if you, now this is a very basic surface level, you know, I'm a fan of learning about this explanation. So I'm not a scientist, but when it comes to evolution biologically speaking, a lot of the evolution happens over long periods of time through stresses and pressures environmental or otherwise. And it takes a long time. So humans evolved to throw with accuracy. For example, that didn't happen in 100 years took a long time first evolve that ability and the pressures were on us constantly that entire time. Now we're in a point now where and there is a little bit of evolution that happens or adaptation that happens. Not through what's it called when your genes can. Damn, I forgot the term when you're like your if your mom experiences something then you have gene epigenetics. There you go. Epigenetics will maybe even cause some changes as well. But the main evolutionary changes that happen come from these pressures. And you know, the weak people die, the stronger ones live, they have the, the capacity to deal with the stress they pass on their genes over time. This becomes a big thing. We're living in a time now where our environment evolves and changes way faster than our biology does. So in the future, I highly doubt humans are going to biologically evolve to handle McDonald's, but I think our technology will evolve to where we where we'll be able to eat McDonald's. Right, nanobots are able to take a pill that cancels out all the negative effects that it supposedly. Right, right. And also the pressures and stresses on us are, they're not killing us until after we're past the age of being able to procreate. So the reason, so many things get, they don't get evolved out of us because they don't hit us till later. You know what I'm saying? Like if they, if they kill us before we have children, then they kill us before we can pass on our genes and then our genes don't get passed on or whatever. But those of us who are dying from eating terrible food and stuff like that, it's usually not happening until we're in our 50s, 60s, 70s. It would have to be the only available edible source of food left. And then like whoever couldn't eat it died or, you know, right away. Yeah. Or then, you know, the rest of everybody that could handle it, there'd be, you know, a variety of people that like benefited from it or, you know, had like detrimental. That's the only way that, that's the only way that you do it because there's too many options. Yeah, there is. And again, our environment changes so fast, not naturally, but we influence it and modify it through technology. So the, most of the evolution we're going to see from here on out is going to be through technology. It's not going to be biological evolution. And if we do evolve biologically, it's because we went in and did it ourselves. So whether we use, you know, like CRISPR technology or, you know, we're able to modify our babies or whatever, that will be how the biology changes, but not through natural means. It just changes too fast. I mean, you look at like the lifestyles we live now, two or three generations ago, it's already radically different. You know, that's not enough time to have these. Yeah, I look at it more as like cyborgs, you know. Probably. Like ways like people will adapt to like embedding like software and chips and things in their body and working with, you know, technology. I'm sure that's, that's going to be the thing I'm, I'm tripping out on as to what that looks like in the future. Yeah, I would bet if we were to go like, you know, a thousand years or 5,000 years in the future, my money would be that humans would be less biology, more technology, far more. For sure. It'd be there, you know, hyper intelligent robots or, you know, consciousness transfer or something, but definitely wouldn't be biology. I mean, I plan to have my second kid glow. Do you remember those glow, remember when we were kids, glow worms? Do you remember that? Yeah, yeah, yeah. You'd go to bed with them at night because you're scared. Kid lights up a shit. Totally. Give your kid an EMF toy to go to sleep with.