We go. The Bitcoin group, the American original for over the last 10 seconds, the sharpest Satoshi's, the best Bitcoin's, the hardest crypto currency talk. We'd like to welcome our panelists, Dan Eve, the crypto raptor. We have an infinite amount of cash. Josh Good gola from Fall Toro. An infinite amount of cash, you say? One got from phone hot. And I'm Thomas Hut from the world crypto network, moving on to issue one Bitcoin price ignores 2.3 Fed cash. Somebody's echoing in the background. There is an infinite amount of cash at the Federal Reserve headphones. There is an infinite amount of cash at the Federal Reserve. A perfect storm is brewing for the Bitcoin price. Bit max CEO all in mother fuckers on Bitcoin and gold. The coronavirus and everything continues to affect the Bitcoin price. Will it go up? Will it go down? They're now printing 2.3 trillion dollars to buy junk bonds. One got with how will this affect the price of Bitcoin? Yeah, I mean, it seems like, you know, in theory, you would think, well, there's all this money coming into the market that should make the price of Bitcoin go up. But it's not clear that that money is going to make it into the market. Maybe it will, maybe it won't. There are a lot of grants being apparently dropped into the population, right? Like if you have a small business or whatever, you can get some money. And there is some money spreading into the economy. And maybe that'll lead to buying Bitcoin. Whoa, you know, balance the camera right there. But I think, you know, there is somewhat of a correlation right now between Bitcoin and the stock market and gold and silver and Dow Jones. I'm looking at a chart right now and they're all kind of generally correlated. Bitcoin does seem to lead the pack like it moved. It went up first, it peaked first, it crashed first and recovered first, little, you know, it just doing everything that the market does because it's doing it first. And that's really interesting. So I'm not sure if it's going to go up or down, but you know, my bet and where my money is right now is that we've bottom. And basically it's a slow climb up from here. Crypto Raptor. There is an infinite amount of cash at the Federal Reserve. So I think we've got the harving must be coming up now in what must be about 35 days or something. So that's about five, five each week's away. And I think we seem to be a lot of the countries haven't quite reached the peak for coronavirus yet. I think we're starting to, I think get over a bit more of the scaredness now, especially that everyone's getting pent up, they're locked up. So this excitement about the free money, this, you know, the trillions that's been printed, whilst it all sounds good right now when we're in desperation, as we start, you know, going back to normality, I think it's going to set in. There's going to be that realization that this printing of trillions isn't good. It's not, you know, it's not constructive. It's not going to help in the, well, you know, in the short term, it's constructive, I suppose, in a way. But the money isn't just not going to trickle down. You've got problems with, you know, with withheld grants in the UK. There's banks are saying that the people need to collateralize where they're loans against the personal assets. For example, which, you know, they shouldn't be doing. It's if it's government backed emergency funds, you know, they should be giving it out a bit more, a bit more, you know, willy-nilly. So yeah, I think we're going to be, there's going to be a bit of an awakening. Hopefully this compounded with the 2070,000 eight crisis is going to make people really run to Bitcoin and to gold. Josh, Bitcoin and England. Yeah, I mean, I tweeted today that a little, a little truth about economic theory that seems very basic, but a lot of people don't understand it. And that the fact is that they print currency and they don't print money. And when you print currency, currency isn't value. Currency is a measurement of value in the marketplace. And when you print a trillion new currency units, all it does is measure the same amount of value. So each of that currency that unit is worth just less. And and you know, as the other side of this coin, and it's a really important part is that that value destruction doesn't happen straight away. And this is why a lot of the DeFi projects and stuff, I'm a little bit skeptical about over the long term because you can't just change inflation within an hour of removing coins or adding coins. What happens is that value trickles down into the economy. The first people to get their hands on this money have the full purchasing power of the money and of the currency. And and this is this is the the awful thing is that it's usually this crony capitalism. And you know, I'm I go under the wing of more the extreme capital, you know, an agro capitalist sort of philosophy. I really find it interesting. But the crony capitalism, which a lot of people point to as normal capitalism and what we live in underneath now is this this mechanism where the government just has their friends in corporate powers and corporations use the government as their enforcement arm. And basically they are the ones that are going to see the first they're the ones that going to get this money first mostly by by a vast percentage. And they're going to have the full purchasing power. So we will see the trickle down effect very, very quickly. And this is why both gold and Bitcoin, they aren't good in the moment of the crisis. And I've said this before in the show, they're good in the aftermath and the aftermath is coming hard. Exit question, the price of Bitcoin this time next week, higher or lower, one galt. I'm sorry, what was the question? The price of Bitcoin higher or lower. One next week. Higher. All right, higher than Eve. Higher. Josh, Valtoro. Lower. Magic eight ball. Will the price of Bitcoin be higher next week? Getting the good shake. Ask again later. The ball next week. Ask next week. We'll see moving on to issue two. Ooh, hacks. Travel X paid $2.3 million in Bitcoin to get it system back from hackers. The hackers controlled their networks for more than a month. They paid more than 285 Bitcoins to get their network back. Meanwhile, hackers exploits flaw in decentralized Bitcoin exchange BISC to steal $250,000 in Bitcoin. What is it about Bitcoin and hacking? We're talking about this all the time. The hackers are back again, which is more interesting to you. Josh, that travel X, a big company paid 2.3 million, or that BISC, a small up and coming decentralized exchange, was hacked. The thing is that a lot of blame gets put onto Bitcoin for hackers, and they're saying that ransomware is this new thing now. But I actually remember ransomware attacks in the 90s. And people would, you know, encrypt their hardware. It's just the same. And to get the encryption key, they would have to leave money in a certain spot. And, you know, there's a terrible wave. That's possible. That could never happen. Yeah, I mean, I remember seeing it on the news thing, you know, what a weird world we live in. But, you know, Bitcoin's made this a lot easier for that threat to happen. And of course, but look, we are in a world now where we're discovering security for the first time, digital security for the first time properly. We only had to care about people's data before. And people seem to have this distance to their data. They didn't see how, you know, I mean, they give it out left-right and center. They really don't care about it. They're starting to know, which is great. But they didn't really. Now that we have true digital money, oh, and by the way, banks get hacked all the time, like all the time on a monthly basis. And it's never talked about. It's always pushed on the carpet and lots of money is given out and lost and stuff to bank hacks. It's the Bitcoin you can see it. And because it's so rare, you can't just reprint them and reissue them. So, yeah, what's more interesting, I would say that, you know, the ransomware attacks just aren't interesting to me. I think they're interesting in terms of a legal, in terms of a security front, like backup your stuff, you know, back it up continuously. Have multiple backups going over the time. I mean, if anyone's watching the Tiger King, the guy lost all his footage because he didn't backup. I mean, backups are 101 of any security, a digital security, and this is where we're becoming better. We've got thousands of years of physical security behind us. And in terms of vaults and holding things like gold, and we understand how to do that really, really well. Like it is impossible pretty much to get into the vaulting facilities that we use. But digital security is very new. 25 years at the most. And because of Bitcoin, the last 10 years, it's really ramped up. You're right, Josh. Not only are banks hacked, they're also robbed. And they don't write about that either. Why do you rob banks? That's where the money is, right? And thanks to everyone for joining us in the audience. We have about 40 people watching us and about nine people have given us a thumbs up. So please give us a thumbs up and a share. That's how YouTube discovers whether or not a show is good. And they share it with the other people. So just thumbs up all the YouTube shows that you think are good. So that more people will watch them. Dan Eve, which is more interesting, this hacked for 250k or yet another ransomware attack. And of course, Bitcoin's fault too. Yeah, I mean, it's crazy isn't it? You can't blame Bitcoin. It's a tool. It's a means of doing something. And it's silly when people don't say, well, people have used drugs, for drugs for the last 50, what it is, they don't go, okay, fear must be bad. This whole stupid thing that it's just hating anything that's Bitcoin related. But I think as you were saying about, bank is getting hacked all the time. Any new technology also gets, it's particularly susceptible to hacks and because of the infrastructure around it. So that's at the banking level, like the popular one, the recent ones, NFC hacks, mobile phones and cards, there's a lot more protections that are happening now. And we're only starting to see, you know, gearing up from a maximum of usage of ยฃ30 on a, on a, you know, cardless contact list. I think it's going up to 40 or 60 or something. So, you know, gradually, as those systems around, you know, tighten up and controlling the fraud and the hacks, you know, that's proliferating a bit more and that, you know, we're being able to use it a bit more, you know, in one go, rather than just having sort of ยฃ20, ยฃ30 now moving up. But the other thing is PayPal. So founders at work, I was a book, and I think it was either, I think it was a young musk that was interviewed in it. But they talked about PayPal in the early days. And, you know, they had so many problems with fraud and hacking and stuff. And they had to, you know, eventually got around it and became one of the biggest online payment systems on earth. So, you know, all early technology is used for either for bad things because it's, you know, there's not a lot of infrastructure around there for detecting these bad things. And so, yeah, which is just one of the, one of the mill things, you were actually in about 2002, my dad phoned me when I was on back from uni and he was like, can you come look at my computer, the family computer? And I was like, oh yeah, sure, sure. And he said, yeah, he's like, you know, should we go upstairs? And I was like, yeah, okay, so he showed me the thing. And obviously, it didn't say anything specifically. But, you know, it was, we've got your data and every time you, you know, even he even knew that he'd got an end task and explorer. And it shut down, but it would come back like 10 seconds later. And so, it didn't say anything particularly revealing. But I did obviously research it after I got rid of it for him. And yeah, it wasn't a bad site, but, you know, I spent my mom didn't know. Dan's absolutely right. Not only was PayPal built on fraud, but eBay as well. An incredible amount of early internet fraud. So much so that they had to create whole departments, massive strategies, massive countermeasures, real cat and mouse fight over who was going to win the internet in those early days. Juan, go your thoughts on these exciting new Bitcoin hacks. Well, I mean, it's just funny that it was a $250,000 hack. In the history of Bitcoin hacks, $250,000 is nothing. It's a hair and a cat. And, you know, that does give credit to BIS. You know, the central is exchange. They don't really have a hot wallet. They don't really have, you know, a big sort of central store of coins. What the hack was the kind of like the handshake protocol that helps the trade happen. And so that's being kind of, you know, update and such. So, you know, very good news, right? It's actually a very good thing for BIS that the hack was so relatively small. But yeah, you know, it's also proved that the Bitcoin is valuable, valuable and it works well as cash and it's not reversible and so on. So, you know, unfortunately gets news because there's no big bank money to kind of hush, hush the stories. But yeah, Bitcoin is hardening the internet and that's definitely good for everybody over the long term. This might also be a big benefit to BISC, one of the smaller exchanges that they get mentioned a bunch of times and they're included in the conversation of fellow hacked exchanges, joining pretty much all of them so far except for a few. Moving on, did you know the World Crypto Network has its own audio podcast on iTunes and many other places where you can listen to audio podcasts? Check out the World Crypto Network audio podcast at worldcryptonetwork.com or anywhere else. Issue three, New York Power Plant sells 30% of its Bitcoin mining hash rate to institutional buyers. Yes, we talk about power plants all the time, but we used to talk about power plants all the time in the past two and they weren't actually doing this. Look right there from inside the Bitcoin mining facility at the power plant. Actual workers installing actual miners, capturing that power and then storing it in a way in Bitcoin. And what's even exciting now is not only are they having success, they're selling the additional 30% of its Bitcoin mining hash rate to institutional buyers, large buyers such as banks and other financial institutions. Let's go to Dan Eve first. How excited are you about the New York Power Plant story and the institutional buyers? I think it's a great idea. If you're going to be not using the access electricity that's being produced, then why not use it towards mining Bitcoin? As you said, it's like another way of storing the energy essentially. You're storing energy into economical energy. So I think it's cool to take advantage of it. Be interesting to see if it proliferates across the US because obviously they've got a lot of generate a lot of renewables there. I suppose, in fact, Josh, what's it like in Germany? You've got great renewables over there. Is there any push towards mining with that access? Not that I've heard of. I mean, there was some scammy ICO that tried to like make content shipping containers that they would push near some of these facilities. But I haven't seen it. I think this is the start of it, for sure. There are copycats bound to happen. There's energy. The weird thing is, a lot of people don't understand how energy is made. There's this constant flow of energy. They try to bring it down and push it up a little bit. But there's always access. There has to be. Because you need to produce more than there's being made. Otherwise, you have blackouts. Where does this all go? It's always to be. One, God. It's always amazed me that Bitcoin is actually sinking into the infrastructure of society. And this is a really great example of how that's happening. Like Bitcoin is actually merging with power plants. The more that this happens, the less likely it is that there's any chance that Bitcoin can be uprooted from society and destroyed. Because now it's becoming part of the business model of energy plants in order to optimize and make more money and now waste as much electricity. On the other hand, one of the most popular and unique scams that have come out of Bitcoin have been cloud mining scams. We've seen a lot of them go down. We've even seen multi-level marketing cloud mining scams go down. Famous one that went down recently is the BitClub network. We're now reaching institutional level cloud mining scams. So that's really exciting. That's progress if you see it. We're breaking new barriers all the time. Exit question and especially good question for Josh in Germany. Is it worth running a nuclear power plant to mine Bitcoin? Josh, go ahead and from both a country perspective and as well from your personal perspective, if you owned a nuclear power plant, would you mine Bitcoin? I mean, sure. Why? Of course. If I owned a plant, I mean the hardest thing is to get enough ASICs, really especially with China's supply chain problems. But yeah, I think Germany hasn't, I think they've taken off their nuclear power. They've gone mainly to renewables. Nuclear is, I think it's the problem with nuclear is that the industrial military complex is very tired into the whole industry and really like it for that reason. But I don't see that there's, you know, apart from that, the technology is definitely getting better and better to have really good nuclear power. But I think there's just better. Okay, I mean, we're sitting on a ball of heat here, ladies and gentlemen. You just need to dig a couple of, well, maybe a hundred kilometers down and you've got infinite heat. Stick a pipe with a U-bend and another pipe going up and pour some water down that thing. You'll get steam coming up. I mean, you just don't need nuclear power. I don't think so. Dan Eve, can I heat up the cooling towers for you? Yes, I'm all for nuclear power because I think for, I know we can reach it with renewables. But it does a lot less pound for pound, damage than, say, coal and burning of any other fossil fuels. Plus, there's only been like, I know that say, only because obviously recently, Chernobyl has been on, but there's only only been three My Island, Fukushima and Chernobyl. But when you think about the amount only, but when you think about the amount of deaths from the back, yeah, but only the thing about the deaths and the impact of that compared to all of the coal that's been fired and all like, you know, it's so much better for the environment if you're able to stash that nuclear waste and it's done properly. You know, the Chernobyl reactor was a stage one or a 1b reactor. There's, you know, there's stage like two or two up to B or three or whatever there's loads now. Big stages, great stages, probably the best stages in the world. But I do think, I do think that nuclear power is, sorry, I mean, I'm in the rot loft and there's only a ceiling right on. So I've got to use the Bitcoin flag to wave as a set to get the sense of turn back, honestly. So I'm not really, I've just got to do that every now and then. That obsessed with Bitcoin. You know, wave the flag, any which way you go. Yeah, he's like, he's like that self-blogger. So they just want to wave the flag. Go, go, go. Anyway, sorry. Yeah. I'll go for option B. Juan S. Galt should we get some plutonium ready? Yeah, sure. Why not? I think I have this, this, this, this, how can I say this? I had this vision once about what Satoshi was going to do with the money that he has, like his thousand bit, his million Bitcoin. And I think on, on the year 2069, he's going to come back alive because he's going to, he's uploaded himself, obviously, right into probably a better body or some sort of cybernetic thing. It's going to be something like that. And then he's going to grab all the Bitcoin and then he's going to buy the moon. Because why not? And then, you know, and then in the moon, which is where we're all wanting to go. Anyway, he's probably going to, you know, that's where the power plants are going to go and then he'll start mining Bitcoin there. The nuclear power plants. Who's he buying it off? Well, apparently some guy actually claimed it. I don't know if you know this, but there's been like, there's this guy, I don't know if the moon specifically, he claimed it. I think maybe there's some guy that claimed it, but there's this guy that started just saying, well, you know what? Nobody's claimed Mars. So I'm just going to claim Mars. And then he created a legal contract. And then there's a whole story about that in the court system. So there might be somebody that actually wants to move. I don't know, but he'll do it. He'll figure it out. The moon would be a good buy right now. Very good real estate. No virus at all. The virus does not live in the vacuum of space. So you'd be safe. I hate nuclear power proponents here, but we don't have anywhere to put the waste. So it would be a bad idea to mine Bitcoin with nuclear power. However, in this rare case, given the fact that the Germans already have power plants, pretty much ready to go. I don't know how much they sunset at them. But in a theoretical world, if I was Germany, and I could turn on all those nuclear power plants and mine Bitcoin for the good of the German people to hold it long term, that'd be pretty impressive. I'd have to give that a try. Let's move on to the next issue. Issue four Bitcoin cash, bitch attack. You can now 51% attack Bitcoin cash for the cost of a single Bitcoin. That's a sweet deal. That's right. Following the Bitcoin cash's first happening, it now costs roughly $7,300 or one Bitcoin to attack the Bitcoin cash network for one hour. The Bitcoin cash happening was an absolute disaster with the currency having lost 96% of its value against Bitcoin and now being mined by something like 3% of the Bitcoin miners perhaps even falling to 1.2%. Dan Eve, is it all over for B cash? Oh, it's savage, isn't it? I saw that they compared to Bitcoin. It's lost like 97% of its value since what day one. Not only that, the fact that I think it was 98.8% of mining is going towards out of Bitcoin cash and Bitcoin ABC or whatever it is. I know S2, STD, Bitcoin, STD. So 98.8% to go to Bitcoin, then 0.5% to B cash and then 0.7% to BSV. It's really sad days. It doesn't look like rights looking so good, especially now with the court case continuing here. I think it seems like people are putting forward the case that he plagiarised his paper as well. I don't know, I think it's 2005 paper, apparently. So it's not looking good for those guys. It's just a bit of a shame, yeah. The hash rate is dwindling. That's the only death, that's the only death mining spiral that I can see is in happening in B cash. It's just going to go and it'll eventually get sucked into Bitcoin as well. Yes, good gola. I doubt it costs only 7.5 or 7.5 or 51% at a packet. But if that is the case, it's pretty savage. The thing is that we saw this with Litecoin as well. Litecoin after the harvining. Also, it's hash rate dropped. Through every harbing of Bitcoin, there's always been a lot of speculation beforehand about what's going to happen. And gloom and doom and all sorts of predictions would happen. But it's always done the opposite. It's gone up in price. So I'll be interested to see now what happens to the Bitcoin hash rate post harvining. It's still an experiment. But in terms of Bitcoin cash and Bitcoin SB, I have always wondered this, actually, because they're basically going through the same harvining and they already have the same amount of coins out there. With such low value on the market, it's very, very difficult for miners to really jump on that train if they're not going to get that many coins out every time. So this was the beauty of Bitcoin going from the beginning. In the beginning, you jumped on the hash rate. Because there was a lot of Bitcoin. And it's kind of this self evolving, growing thing that happens. But if you fork off and you don't have that hash rate that's traveled with you over that time period, then you have to quickly be very, very much better. You have to be a lot better to track that hash rate and the users and the price. The price has to jump up to the same as where it should be. And it just hasn't. So interesting, interesting game theory, really cool stuff playing out right now. It seems like the Bitcoin cash halving was the moment when a lot of Bitcoin cash miners suddenly realized they could also mine Bitcoin. One galt. I'm looking at a website here that claims to do the math on how much it costs to attack different all coins. I mean, according to this BSV would take cost about $4,500 to attack BSV presumably for an hour. There's a bunch of this. That's the problem with a lot of these all coins. They pretend to be decentralized. They pretend to have security, but it's trivial for most of them to make them useless. Some of the things you could do if you had, if you want to throw some money at this, is you could deny blocks that actually have transaction in them. So you could be, you could mine empty blocks. You could also let them mine blocks and then catch up and reorg all of them and basically reverse transactions. You could censor which transactions get in. You could double spend against exchanges. You could send money to an exchange. You could buy up, for example, Bitcoin cash on an exchange. How would this work? Anyway, you can double spend exchanges. I'm not going to try to put it out how it works right now, but it's been done before. It was done with Bitcoin gold. It's bad. It's really bad. On top of that, you can short it. If it costs one Bitcoin to attack Bitcoin cash and do this kind of attack, you could attack it and then short it on Bitmix, at 10x or 20x, and make your money back. There are no really tough positions. If the only way they can get out of it is if they change the hash algorithm to something else. But if they do that, are they really the true Bitcoin? Are they the true vision of Satoshi? It seems like they're between a rocket heart place and something else that's difficult to get out of some. I'm trying to short it, but I missed the grab. They're in between a big block and a small block. Yeah, there you go. Yeah, we got that. Thanks to the 63 people watching us. Now we have about 20 thumbs up. It's not too late to thumbs up the show. Maybe you didn't do it last time. You could do it this time. If it's your first time here, you came in through YouTube somehow. You can subscribe down below. Hit the bell for notifications. Also, hello to our Facebook and Twitter viewers. There's like five of you. I'm told. We're going to move on to the exit question. Who will give up first? Roger Vier and B cash or Craig Wright and BSV? Josh Gagala. I think they're going to go down with the burning with the Titanic. They're going to. I think they're just too much invested in their coin. I'd like to see Roger back and try to warn people and say, it didn't work out. Let's jump back. We'll see. We'll see humility. Just like that time, they let Lucifer back into heaven. Everything was forgiven. Dan, Eve, do you agree with Josh that they will go down with the ship? It's Jones town all around. Don't drink the Kool-Aid. I think so, but it's only going to be the external factors that extinguish either one. I definitely wouldn't mind seeing Roger back on on proper Bitcoin. I wouldn't like gone back to proper Bitcoin, Roger. I definitely wouldn't mind seeing him back on Bitcoin. BSV might meet a head sooner with the court cases that rub this year. There's only so long that it can be bankrolled by Calvin Air. That's probably going to last longer than maybe B cash itself. That will come short. We'll last shorter time overall because of the other stuff that's coming in from the side like the court case. You can feel it. Juan Galt, you've had the most time to think about this. Who will quit first? Roger Vier or Craig Wright? You've got to give it to Roger. He has gone all in and he has fought it hard. I think Roger Vier is a better entrepreneur than definitely Craig Wright. The problem is Calvin Air actually has a business model that's parallel and separate than from Bitcoin and crypto. He's a gambling entrepreneur with at least one big corporation in Canada and Montreal and then other gambling enterprises elsewhere. He can probably keep cash flowing this stupid game for a long time. Whereas Roger Vier, I don't know how his memory dealers, business is still going. I don't know if he's still managing it. But if he's going all in on Bitcoin cash, then he might be the one to go down first. It's going to be a tie race to the bottom, guys. I don't think he's gone all in on Bitcoin cash. He's got a bit of everything. He's not stupid. He'd be well diversified. He'd be well diversified. But he definitely lost the lot. Neither one will leave. Both will fight to the end. It's a good question though. All right, moving on to predictions. Josh, are you ready with a prediction or a story of the week? No. I think we can also say, we almost made it through. I don't think we said the V word once. I think we're pretty much in the clear so far this week. We made it. They were printing money, but we didn't say what they were printing money for. So let's go to Dan Eve with a story of the week, maybe a preview, something you're working on. Whether the V, the V, do you say that what they're printing, something that begins with V? I think it's Vulcan. Vulcan. All right, I was just about, okay, yeah, that would have been the wrong answer. Oh, dear. Oh, yeah, so I predict that I've written a bit of a, a bit of a, okay, it's slightly controversial. It's probably, you know, and it's just maybe I don't believe in all the stuff of it. So just going to be a bit of a, a bit of a pre thing, but I'll give you a bit of, I can't play the music. So I'm going to do an accapello version and, and see how I can say it. You have to warm up the flag, please. Warm up the flag. Here come the World Helldog, her, Tynas, Biola, political gangsters, her, Tynas, this is the Covidine, Teiborne, her, Tynas, still, Fondaway that, her, Tynas, miss identify, got it under control, nice try, ain't no pandemic or we'd have it flagged. You know, we know T-dross, airborne global. Oh, no, mask it up, hell no, uh oh, body bags, get out, kick them, no World Helldog. So obviously it's a bit cheeky. Yeah, so I'm just kind of, I'm learning my way back through fruity loops. So yeah, I'll give it a go. I predict, I predict within a week. Within a week, there we go, crypto raptor, delivering on time, maybe. One got prediction or a story of the week, go ahead. Well, I'm just really, really confused and entertained by the fact that at the beginning of this, this crisis, the leading conspiracy theory was that it was some sort of bio-weapon thing leaked out of a lab in China. And then now the big conspiracy theory is actually not even a virus, it's a, sorry, I said it, it's actually 5G guys, it's 5G. So which one is it? I mean, it can't really be both unless it is both. That's what some guy responded in one of my comments on social media recently. So I mean, I don't know, I'm just very, very confused, but I predict we might have another big big theory coming up in the next two weeks because why not? Well, I hope it's both. I hope that 5G caused a virus. No, I want 5G. By the way, I wanted to say that, um, uh, Valtor has never been hacked. Just you mentioned before some other exchanges or there's a large list, but we've been around for a long time now. We've never been hacked. We're a security obsessed freaks. So it's just, it is, there's some bugs in the system and this and that, but that's because we put all our effort on making sure that the other side of the security is quarter time. There. But prediction, prediction of the week, I think we'll be here at home sitting next week and probably the week after Easter and, you know, it's, it's, it's such a crazy time that I really do feel like my life is directed by David Lynch at the moment. Is it a pretty good director? At least Laura Dern will show up. Oh, that'd be cool. Yeah. I think Easter Sunday though, because I think today is good Friday, because the markets, markets were closed randomly on Friday. So thanks so much for everyone for joining us. At one point, we had about 60 viewers and when I asked you to like it the second time, it went from like 20 likes to 30 likes. So a lot of people were like, okay, you're going to ask me twice, you know, maybe I'll like it. So thanks for liking the show, subscribing down below, hitting the bell, if you want to watch some political news, we've been doing the Thomas Hunt show all week talking about Trump and the V word and everything and trying to talk Bitcoin to when we can. But you know, we kind of obsessed with like hundreds of thousands of people potentially dying seems kind of important to me. Dan was there today. How did it go today, Dan? Pretty good. Yeah, it's cool. I like it. I like the dissecting of the news. There's a lot of crap out there at the moment. And yeah, it's good to kind of look at it in detail and just kind of be a bit critical of what we're reading and, you know, coming up some ideas and free thinking. Definitely everyone's homework assignment for the weekend is to watch Tiger King. If Dan finishes up, maybe we'll talk about it on Monday. And of course, we'd be talking about spoilers. It's a pretty fun documentary. It's pretty silly. It's light. It's not going to change your life or anything. But at the end of every episode, they're going to give you an incredible cliffhanger with the most dramatic and bizarre information about these weird people who like to raise tigers. And you're just keep watching. You're going to watch six hours straight. So I look forward to you guys checking out Tiger King at home. Of course, Tiger King, Idiocracy and Jaws. Those are pretty much what we're saying that you should check out during this quarantine then make you think. Thanks to everybody for donating. Our goal is to raise one million dollars in Bitcoin right now. That is 44 Bitcoins. It's as easy as that sound. That was the sound of someone's wallet donating. Boop. And you could donate here. $5.10. Anything you got would help keep the show running. Maybe you made too much money in Bitcoin. You want to just donate the whole thing. Be done with it. Stop the fundraiser. We won't have to fundraise anymore. Turn off the cameras and just do shows for fun. But we'll be back again tomorrow with another episode of the TomSunt Show because we work on weekends too. So, but that's about it. Until next time. Bye. Bye. Now we're all the buttons. There are so