The consequence of that was financial instability, and let me now explain how that, how that worked. Okay? Look at, look at these numbers up here. Almost all of the deposits you can see are in the country banks. That's the big number there, 2,627,000,000, right, deposit acounts Okay. These deposits, the reserves, of those country banks, are, are, are partly in, in notes, but mostly in deposits in other banks in the, in the, in the money centers. Now what happened? Ag-, The United States was an agricultural country, very much so, at this time, and that meant that there was a strong cyclical character To the demand for money, the demand for notes. At, at, crop harvesting time, the farmers would withdraw from their deposits and they needed notes okay, in order to, in order to move the crops. And Young mentions in this article $50 million, okay. Doesn't sound like that much. Okay, but, just think about what happens now. Look at this chart here. Imagine that of this 2,000,000,627 50 million dollars is withdrawn, is withdrawn. Okay that requires the country banks to pull 50 million dollars, let us say, from New York, deposits in a New York bank. Those 50 million dollars, however, the total reserves being held by those New York banks are 221. So that's 25% of their reserves. And now they have to contract credit or they have to get more reserves from somewhere. Okay. Let me write some of this down, this is what causes the financial crisis. [SOUND] Seasonal instability. [SOUND] Okay, the country banks the country farmers first withdraw $50 million in cash. Okay, from their local banks. Ultimately, that's a withdrawal. That implies withdrawal of 50 million $50 million from New York, from New York banks. Okay. So now they are way below their 25% required reserves. So they have to replenish those reserves. And how do they do that? Calling in call loans to speculators. [SOUND] Okay, Young explains that the, the New York banks, when they had access reserves, that is to say, when the farmers didn't need them. Okay, they didn't want to just let them sit idle. So they would lend them to stock brokers, who would use them to as, to, to buy stocks, to make a speculation, and they would promise to give this money back It was like overnight loans. So they were, they are call loans. They were, they were overnight loans. And so come the harvest, they would say, okay, now I need the money back. Okay. And as a consequence, the speculators would have to sell whatever they had bought with that. Okay. In order to come up with the money. And so there was an asset price consequences. If, if, it the speculators are selling, you see stock market stocks fall, [SOUND], and interest rates rise. [SOUND]. They also tried to raise reserves from world money markets, which mean London. Okay. [SOUND] Which, which often disrupted world gold markets as as a matter of fact. So the United States is this big child, Okay, in the world monetary system, and every fall, okay, it throws a little fit. Okay, and it causes, it causes the acid market to grow crazy. It causes the international gold market to go crazy, okay.. eventually, Europe got sick of this, okay, and they sent us some help, Paul Wallberg, okay.. To help us create a central bank, okay. but we did some of this on our own too, there was agitation for a central bank, as, as well. The key, the key moment was 1907, the financial crisis of 1907. when, JP Morgan sort of showed us, how we could get out of this crisis ourselves, okay. By creating, amongst these New York banks, all of his friends. They create, they had a clearing house, and they created clearing house loan certificates, which were a substitute for money. So they created elastic money supply, and elastic reserves, but it was all private and for their friends Okay. What the Fed did was to say, "Hey; that's a good idea. Let's do that for everyone, and with a central bank. Now, I'm going to show you how that worked, okay.