On Thursday, the 116th Congress was sworn into office. Returning Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi wielded the gavel like she had won an incredibly rare item at an auction (not entirely untrue), Republicans booed Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for existing, and with the government shutdown in full effect, security at the U.S. Capitol was no match for the seemingly thousands of children who ran amok. There were also some genuinely touching moments: The first Native American congresswomen, Rep. Deb Haaland (D-NM) and Rep. Sharice Davids (D-KS), shared a tearful embrace, and later, Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) called Donald Trump a motherfucker.

In light of this bold new world, one that inspires the teeniest, tiniest bit of hope, Business Insider created a useful infographic showing the statistical changes in demographics between the 115th Congress and the 116th Congress. One particular number, as pointed out by intrepid observer Sean Morrow, stands out:

On some level, an increase in Millennials makes sense. They've come of age—the oldest Millennials will turn 38 this year, while the youngest will turn 23—and as much as septuagenarians love hogging all the branches of government, they literally can't live forever. (At least for now.) Still, it's genuinely weird that there were so few Millennials after the 2016 election, though that discrepancy was understandably buried beneath slightly more pressing concerns at the time. Now the discrepancy is no more, and it is extremely cool and nice and not a coincidence that there was a 420 percent increase in Millennials. Most of these youngsters will be in office whenever weed is legalized at the federal level.

But why wait until Trump is gone? They should consider pouncing on the moment and pushing for nationwide marijuana legalization immediately. This may seem like a fool's errand, considering Republicans control the Senate, and Mike Pence definitely refers to smoking weed as Puffing the Magic Dragon. But weed legalization is inevitable, no matter how much Jeff Sessions squealed about it during his time in the Trump administration. Arguably, the only thing better than legal weed would be if the House jumped from 26 to 69 Millennials in 2020.