 First time chat. Donim... Donimparn. Donimparn? Donimparn. Hey Chichou, love listening to your take over the years. Happy to say this is my first time participating in the live stream. Welcome, welcome. Got a question for you. I want to bring up tough topics with my friends, such as Armenian Genocide or other things, other things we didn't learn in school that I've learned about through your awareness raising, but I'm unsure how to without it being a negative discussion. How do you talk about tough topics with your friends constructively? First of all, some people can't handle tough topics, so you have to gauge the situation, and you have to gauge the situation where you have to decide if you want to talk about tough topics and they don't. Do you really want to be around them? Or you have to categorize those people maybe as fair weather friends, right? Fair weather friends are people you go to drinking with, party with, you go to a concert with fair weather friends sometimes, good friends as well, but fair weather friends are people that can only, you can only interact with them on a very superficial level, right? Just about having fun, fair weather friends, right? Other people that have the mental capacity, emotional capacity, spiritual capacity, talk about heavy topics. If they don't understand a certain situation, you can always relate it to present, at present, what's going on, right? So for example, when I talk to people about decentralization, right? Centralized government built, oh Chico, you're against all governments, you for years, you've been anti-government. I go, well, I'm anti-centralization. And they're like, oh, the government has been good to us and stuff like this. And I sort of lay it in there and say, well, do you think it's okay for the government to get, to prevent people getting medical advice from their own doctors? And no one's pro that, no one thinks that bureaucrats and a federal government, centralized government, should ever get in between a doctor and their patient, right? So you tell them that and then they say, well, no, that's wrong. And then you say, okay, that's how much power the centralized government has right now. So decentralization means that should be lessened, right? And then you introduce it slowly. And you sort of try to, so for me, I try to relate it to something they can digest, right? They can relate to in their own lives. Sometimes it's difficult. Sometimes people don't understand economics and politics. Economics is easier to deal with. Or dealing with politics through economics is easier to deal with. That's why I've initially focused a lot on economics. And I have focused a lot on economics, because economics rules politics. As I've said before, you can't really talk about economics and politics separately. It's like space, time and physics. You don't talk about space and then talk about time. They're one word. They're one thing, space, time. So economics and politics are one thing. So one way, one of the best ways to talk to people about sensitive topics is related to them from an economic perspective, right? Really. So if housing prices are too expensive, why are housing prices are too expensive? Do you think it's okay for construction companies or people that are trying to build houses to have all these inspectors, pay all these fees and all these taxes and all this stuff to government to raise the price of cost of a house, because a lot of the price baked into the house is regulation, right? And regulation, is it bad or is it good? Well, it could be good. It could be bad. So you sort of have to dance, sort of walk a fine line with people to get them to to see what's going on, right? Or to see your perspective, right? And always be open to hear their side of it, right? So that's the way I deal with it. In cases like Julian Assange and stuff like this, it's very difficult for people because they've been propagandized to up the yin-yang. So one of the first things I do with people when I'm trying to talk to them about something is try to not directly or sort of get it out of them, try to figure out where they're getting their information from. And I've known through our associates and friends, right? For multiple years, right? I, you know, I ask people, where do you get your information? Some people proudly say Facebook. And I go, I'm sorry, I can't talk to you regarding certain topics because you're propagandized to your censored up the yin-yang, right? And in those situations are pretty harsh with those people. I've had people tell me they get their news from TikTok. I go, you get your full news from TikTok. That's your fucking full perspective on what's going on in the world. Yes. God damn it, right? So it's a fine line, but I would recommend going through the economics angle with people when you want to talk to them about sensitive topics.