crisis that you can't, you know, the book I did on that, the collapse of the World Trade negotiations a few years later, and the Euro crisis would happen with Greece and Ireland and so forth. So yeah, I just found it endlessly. I hate to say that I, you know, I enjoyed it. Clap my hands and yeah, you know, it's, you feel sorry for the people who suffer and people really do suffer and, but you just have to hope that by writing about it and informing the public debate about these things that those things won't happen quite as often. That's kind of the difficult line we walk, right? I mean, we live in this world, we don't want things to go haywire. At the same time, when things go haywire, it gives us something to write about, to think about, to talk about, and that's sort of our job. So I understand that feeling. So you mentioned that the South Koreans, who were at the time the 11th largest economy in the world, were out of hard currency. Of course, when we're talking about hard (12/45)
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