Okay. Okay. Jack. We will try and give you answers here. Appreciate the questions. I would say when we look at what gives us the confidence when we look at the supply demand equation, despite the fact that the band has been down, it tells us and things have still been and there is, it still continues to be weak tells us that we still have some more supply that needs to be worked through. But we think that we're nearing levels, where you start to overcorrect how much supply has come out. So if we look at it from a supply, posture there's three key factors. There is what's going on with trucks, and we know that we're now few years with the inability to produce enough trucks to maintain the refresh rate within the industry. And so, as was noted we're seeing life steal in the used market, because it's the most viable alternative to a new truck. And that really is not a legitimate, viable alternative when you can't keep the refresh rate alone. And so it's given the challenges and supply chain to deliver the volume of trucks has also led to steep-steep price increases at a time when the rates will not support that. So the first of the three would be looking at what's going on with trucks. We would not be surprised if we saw meaningful cancellations. It sure feels like that world has loosened up quite significantly. And that typically would have a tendency to overcorrect. The second would be labor. There's indications that labor seemed to peak sometime last year and approximately third to maybe the early fourth quarter, but likely in the third quarter when you look at over the road employment. It feels like that's been slipping since we have our own parameters that we look internally when we look at what it takes and how difficult it is to source leads, and in particular to hire experienced drivers. And so we have seen all the signs of labor shifting away from other businesses. And then we've experienced it with services, obviously, that we provide to third party carriers, whether it be fuel discounts, or insurance. And then other relationships we have in our brokerage we definitely are seeing attrition. We understand the economics of trucking. And when we look at where the rate spot rate environment is, it's not possible on many head haul lanes to still be profitable and exceed your cost per mile. So we definitely see the attrition underway in labor and do not see a floor that comes into play to stop that. And then the third would be, well what's the buffer? In other words, what is the appetite for financing to allow small businesses, small carriers, to be able to weather the storm, to get access to funding, to replace and replenish very old equipment with slightly newer equipment, or to navigate negative cash flow situations, and that is the kind of the third leg here and that that has been rather abrupt in terms of banks tightening up the credit there. So those three factors in previous cycles, when you have those three things going on, it just doesn't, it's only a matter of time. And we are arguably into our fifth consecutive quarter of steeply negative spot rates, with unrelenting inflationary costs. So we're going to need to see another quarter or two and see where we go. But the combination of another quarter to where we don't have robust demand and in the supply chains have been able to play a little bit of catch up, they all seem to be pointing to a time where there is, there will eventually we expect in the fourth quarter, you'll have a more ordinary supply chain flow and it will be met with significantly fewer trucks and drivers and trailers. Now, my take on your second question about the revenue call at U.S. Xpress. It's hard to get overly specific until we've closed the deal. There's a lot of information, specifically customer rates, etc, related that we won't have access to until we close that, likely early third quarter. But I would tell you that we are not going into this with any kind of expectation for a revenue call. That's not how we look at this. That would probably be the wrong way to look at it as well given where we are timing wise in the cycle, let alone just the way we approach these kinds of businesses. Now I'm sensing that possibly that comment comes because after the September of 2017, Knight-Swift merger, we saw a decline in revenue, primarily because of a reduction in the number of trucks over the road but that was a different, a very different scenario. That was a scenario where we had new drivers were not subject to hair follicle drug testing. And so after closing that deal in the fall of ‘17, starting in January of ‘18, we began hair follicle drug testing, which disqualified a significant number of drivers very similar to the number of trucks that ultimately came off the road in the first 18 months, we also had some independent contractor exposure in areas that we weren't comfortable with. And so the combination of reducing or increasing safety standards while reducing risk in the independent contractor program and with the drivers hired, that was a very conscious decision we made about what was in the best interest long term of the safety and profitability of Swift and that had more to do with that than it did somehow trying to call or trim revenue. And we wish it wouldn't have been that way. But that's how that was. We weren't able to recruit drivers, qualified drivers at a fast enough pace to replace those that were not qualified. Of course, over time by changing some of the sources and leads and things with the driver hiring we've been able to address and deal with that issue. At U.S. Xpress they have already adopted hair follicle drug testing and so that bridge has already been crossed. They do not have the same kind of independent contractor exposure that was that we previously had. And so when you look at U.S. Xpress what you have is a business that is largely broken up into a few big pieces. You've got a very large dedicated piece approximate [800 million] that's performing today in historically, if I look at previous times, based on their public filings, they were performing in the mid 90s. You've got an over the road piece that's very similar size, almost the same number of trucks, approximately 750 million that's underperforming and it hasn't been profitable. And then you have a $300 million independent business in total transportation that was performing what appears to be largely in the mid to upper 80s. And then a brokerage business, it's got a decent operating ratio, the mid 90s. And so really you break all of that down and we're not looking at this Jack is that there needs to be really any kind of revenue call. And so we'll work through those details after we close. But I wouldn't be budgeting for that.