we already are at 39 people aging in puryear and actually were not at 10,000 a day. that doesn't happen until 2019. but for the boomer generation, the average is 10,000 a day. what happens, and the reason that there's a a projected slowdown in the rate of growth of the aged population, is that the boomers are going to die, and the deaths will catch up and overtake the a jeans towards the middle of the century. and because of the increase in deaths, the actuaries, i believe, have that figured in. but i don't think anyone has really contemplated what having more than double the number of deaths per year in this country, by 2088, will affect hospital operations, the market for funerals, that sort of thing. in the 2020s, because of the increase in deaths, and assuming that one-third of deaths occur in hospitals, which is the historical average, the number of people dying in american hospitals per year is going to go back to more than a million per year. hasn't been this high since 1982. the hospital finances, i suspect, are going to be effective because all of these peop