his friend from the geist kreiss, fritz mcclure, was in the united states, had become the associate editor of the american economic review and said, look, fritz, send me a paper. and fritz said, oh, and it goes okay. when he gets to gibraltar, he decides to do it. and it basically, if you look at some of his earlier work, there's a there's a little piece that he wrote for the oxford liberal review, kind of a student paper in 1941, 1942, that has the ten example that is one of the famous examples of of how a market coordinates disperse knowledge human action in a world of dispersed knowledge. you basically drew on earlier work and, wrote something very quickly, and it becomes his most famous paper versus the thing that he works on for seven years that doesn't go anywhere. and indeed, he writes a sardonic a to does to a friend. he says, i've been saying this stuff for ten years, but it gets in the american economic review and suddenly everybody thinks, oh, great, you know, i mean, so there we go. the academic just one of many stories. somebody writes. okay. all right. right here. thank you.