 I mean now, if we have time I'll get to those, but yeah. This is almost one of those things, but how would you want to know that people who've gone through it did not apply? That's a bit of a question. Through voluntary taxation. And as I don't believe in compulsory taxation, it's theft. You know, even if it's just a little bit, it's still theft. But, you know, I don't know about you guys, but right now the government takes about 50 plus percent of my income. Actually, if you take into account everything, the government actually takes it away from me 60 plus percent of my income, maybe close to 70 percent. It also reduces my standard of living dramatically through all the regulations and everything else going on in the world. Imagine that all went away. People are truly free. I'd have my 60, 70 percent of my income back, but I'd be making a lot more money in real terms because the economy would be, you know, I think the U.S. could grow at 8, 9 percent GDP growth a year. I don't think there are any boundaries to economic growth. I mean imagine that technology is in the advancement and the quality of life and the standard of living and life longevity and everything like that. Would I be willing to take a percentage of my pay and voluntarily pay for military and police? Absolutely. I'd be happy to do it. Who am I protecting me and my values and my property and my goods? Would most people be willing? Yes. Is there going to be a small minority who's not? Sure. Do we call them an economics free writers? Yes. Do I care? No. What's that? It's true. So what? No, you don't. People are happy to fund goods that they or their beneficiaries are, even if other people benefit from free. In the old America, in the 19th century America, people built roads. They built roads and they didn't charge a living for using them. People just used the roads because they wanted to get from point A to point B and they got enormous economic benefits from getting from point A to point B. And if a thousand other people got small economic benefits from getting from point A to point B, what did they take? There's very little cost to maintaining that road and yet the benefits are huge. So look, they are every single day, all of us, benefit enormously from positive externalities. People like to talk about negative externalities. But there are many, many more positive externalities in the world we live in than negative externalities. How many of you actually pay the true value to you of all the products that you use? I mean, think about what your computer really, really needs to you. All the benefits that you get throughout an entire lifetime of having a computer, not just you having a computer, but that the computers exist and that society is all computer-based. I mean, is it worth a thousand bucks to you? No, it's worth millions of dollars to you. If you really think about what it's worth to you as a cumulative of its impact on all society, yet you pay a thousand bucks but the fact that the computer industry exists is an enormous positive externality on it. If you would force to pay the true cost, whatever the hell that means, but that's not how markets work. Markets are all about positive externalities, enormous positive externalities. Not to mention the little ones. You know, we all talk about these negatives, but the negatives are trivial as compared to positive externalities. Now, the free-wider problem is not a problem. So they're free-writers. I'm still willing, it's still, you know, the police force is there to protect me. Yes, I could go through the calculation, well, I won't pay what my neighbors will, but I want to pay because these are good guys and they're protecting me and I value my life. And if you're rational, you would want to do that. And if we ever reach a point where we actually have a free society, most people would be rational. So we're not going to reach a new rationality. So they would be happy to pay for the services that they actually get. It's the reason you don't steal when you go into a store. It's the only reason you don't steal because you'll get caught. How many of you pay when you go to a store? Because it's the great thing to do. Because you got a service and you want to compensate the other side for the service. Well, I hope most of you. If you could get away with stealing, would you do it? No. So why wouldn't you pay for the police if you're getting that service?