well, money has depushuated, but maybe in a more stable fashion. so it's kind of a two-edge sword. i think the last thing interesting about that is if you look at what the federal reserve is buying today, for example in the recent financial crisis buying toxic financial assets from financial firms and insurance companies at the time and so on, they are basically at the question is how much of those mortgage-backed securities would fit in a bushel basket that the fed is paying cash for? did they determine the price by average of the last twenty five years? we don't know. but the fed has opened up the array of assets it purchases under quantity easing to include a lot about that -- well, they're not farm crops are crops of one sort or another produced by one firm or industry or another. and they have done this in order to bolster the financial system. it doesn't a dispositions on the fed right or wrong, it's if you look at this in a particular way, it looks a little edison to give the old inventer his do, maybe his prediction wasn't that far off. now, all of the response materials an