Speaker 2
Sorry. Yeah, yeah. I think, you know, if anyone's listening and they have knowledge about this, they can share it with us, you know, privately or whatever. But I'd love to understand that the conversations in the thought process be behind these numbers. And I guess you can appreciate it. Hey, we're going to let a million people in. Yeah, Rich, how does that affect your desk? You know, you would say, well, socially, it means that there's another million people competing for dates. That's one thing that you would say, of course. But then it seems about housing. But I'm sure that conversation has, why would hope that it's taking place? And you know, obviously, we have the imbalances here in the beginning. But you know, if if governments allow the world to have a free market, you know, price discovery, you know, supply will catch up with demand. And it will get sort of out. But it's a pretty significant factor. Now, whether this will continue next year in the Arab and so forth, one thing I suggested, we do not live in a linear world. So, bear that in mind, that's not going to happen. But again, this was a pretty big, you know, revelation
Speaker 3
key to your point on the linear side. If you study sort of the immigration flows is is if you enter into sort of a deeper or more prolonged recession, you'll see a lot of these temporary workers leave the country. Similar, you know, a friendship, you know, but there was there was some great data and charts and stories about the, you know, the housing bubble that burst in Spain, when they had this massive, massive immigration flows into Spain. And they all basically left once they had that sort of deep prolonged recession there. So I
Speaker 5
mean, watch it. Yeah.