john biggs, journalist, entrepreneur, and full matter of coin, desk, a site specializing in, but coin and digital currencies. welcome people on the program, john kind of get with you in new york because in theory and opportunity for the disenfranchised to be included in a process that will make it easier for them to receive money from abroad without the middleman taking a huge cut on the surface it seems like quite a game changer for el salvador. sure, absolutely. does. i mean the, the ultimate dream for a lot of big coined fans. crypto currency fans in general was the ability to do remittances. remittance is the crypto currency are a sensually free. they're still associated fees, but they're definitely not the $20.00 to $30.00 to even 50 percent fees associated with a western union. those fees are just for pages. so for salvador to, to accept bitcoin as its own fee currency, you could say, or just a sort of generally accepted in a as legal tender is vitally important. because i can basically sit here from my phone with you over $5.00 and not have to worry that i'm going to lose $250.