 So I was talking with a grown-up. Apologies if I'm not, we were talking about a quadratic one. Oh, you're hilarious. We could talk about that. I love it. We'll get into that as soon as I give you this example of how little adults in the western world or in my part of the world understand about investing in personal finance and why our education system is so horrendous when it comes to teaching kids anybody really about investing in personal finance. So three years ago, basically the markets took a tumble for multiple reasons. The stock market, the Dow Jones, we're going to talk about the Dow Jones. Dow Jones dropped. Here, we'll do this. We're just going to put time here. In a matter of two weeks, let's call it one month. So let's say zero time to 30 days. And let's go zero. Dow Jones at the time was around 31,000. Let's say 32,000. So Dow Jones was at 32,000. In a matter of two weeks, even less than that, 10 days, the Dow Jones dropped down to 32,000, 18,000. So just plummet it. So the Dow Jones lost almost 50% of its value. 16 would be 50%. So Dow Jones lost about 40%, let's say, dropped. So minus 40% dropped. In a matter of two weeks, straight down, nose dive. This is the Dow. Dow is the top 30 stocks in Wall Street in the United States that are listed there. There's a whole bunch of them. You can look it up. There's Home Depot, Visa, Microsoft, Apple, all this stuff. A lot of fang stocks. Here is, and I was having this conversation with a family member that has been in the markets for a long time. Here's the same timeframe. Time. 30 days. This is Amazing Spider-Man. We'll say Amazing Spider-Man. Spider-Man. Amazing Spider-Man. Amazing Spider-Man. Don't forget the hyphen. Man number one. Amazing Spider-Man number one in mid-grade. Mid-grade. The reason I was looking at this is because when the markets went down, I was looking at comic books to be able to buy them. Because I was expecting comic books that they'd drop 40%. I was going to buy some. Stopping money into it. Amazing Spider-Man mid-grade. I forget what it was going for, like 30 grand. Let's say around the same price. Let's say it was 30 grand. Amazing Spider-Man number one didn't drop 40%. It came down to around 25,000. That's it. It came down to around 25,000. That's 5,000 drop. 5 over 30. 1 over 6. What's 1 divided by 6? I don't know. What's 1 divided by 6? 1 divided by 6. Equals. So it dropped like 16. Let's say 20%. Not even. It dropped like 16%. Let's call it 15%. It dropped 15% in value. At the same time that Dow Jones was dropping 40%. Nose diving. Meanwhile, if you extend this time into decades, the better investment, if you were about to invest in anything, would have been collectibles instead of the markets. But they don't teach you this in schools. They don't teach you this in schools. The only thing they say investing is main places that they talk about for investing is real estate and stocks. Those are really the only two things they talk about when it comes to places you can invest your money. That's what they're indoctrinating kids with. And as children grow up, they become adults. This is the only thing they know. Invest in either the stock market or real estate. They don't know about collectibles until they get older to get a little wiser. They look at what their finances are doing. They look at how much things they're selling for. Collectibles and stuff like this. Not only that. They don't even consider investing in your health, investing in your community, investing in your family as investment. That doesn't even hit the radar, not in my part of the world. So when it comes to personal finance, investing, education, and centralized indoctrination centers, it's garbage, garbage, garbage, garbage, garbage. Because it's designed to enslave people. And the adults that only believe this crap only believe in investing in their own enslavement. Because when I had this conversation with a family member that has been in the stock market for a long time, and for years now, decades, he's been telling me that investing in comic books is not an investment. It's not a good place to invest. Even though I've shown him otherwise, and I've shown other people otherwise, showing the value going up, selling some comics. Look, I bought this for $1.50. I sold it for $400. Do you have a stock that does that? It's not an investment. Why is it an investment? Collectibles are one of the greatest places you could have invested your money. And there's cognitive dissonance with people who only understand this system of real estate. And they can't believe they're lying eyes. They can't believe they're lying eyes, which is a serious problem in our society. Like, when a little bit... not specifically mathematics related, but it is because it's about our education systems. That's my take. I'm not sure how it is where you are, Cheryl. I just want to get that off my chest.