 Jim. Hello, Yaron. And hello, everyone out there. I'm going to keep this fairly simple today. I don't have any curve balls to throw at you. Maybe next time. Maybe next time. Very simply, what do you think are some very good ideas or quotes or essays that very well reflect? Certainly the outcome of 2020 as a year and where we are today, especially as distinct perhaps from past decades. What do you think from Einran well represents today? From Einran. Well, I mean, I would otherwise, too. Yeah, I mean, everything Grand Road is obviously relevant and both inspiring and depressing and relevant to what's going on right now. In particular, I would look at the voice of reason. She's got two sections there. She's got a section on culture, which is, I mean, it's amazing to read because basically everything she said back then is right on. And you've got essays like the intellectual bankruptcy of our age, our cultural value deprivation, which is brilliant, global balkanization, which is all about tribalism. It's a perfect fall of time. The fascist new frontier. Fascist new frontier. Is that in that book? I don't know, but that's what comes to my mind when I think of this age. Yeah, that's another one. Fascist new frontier. You've got assault from the Ivory Tower, the professor's war against America. I mean, this is, what, 1972 or something? And she's already seen it. Anti-mask for a culture. What's that? Epitaph for a culture. And then in the politics section, you've got antitrust of rule of un-reason. You're going to see a lot of antitrust already have seen. I mean, the Trump administration went and sued both Google and Facebook. We'll see how those, the one that gets us all into trouble about a woman president. That's always fun. But yeah, all of these. How to fight against socialized medicine, hunger and freedom, the American school, why Johnny can't think. That's a Lena Peacock essay that is part of this, part of the voice of reason. The pulpedalists. Wow. The pulpedalists. Talk about what's going on right now in Washington and the cronyism. So tons, tons of content that is relevant. And I suggested this past, but I think partially to stay sane, partially just to keep sharp and not to get caught up in the little stuff that's going on, all the minutiae of American politics and culture today. I read an Ironman essay every week, one essay a week. Good idea. What would you say for somebody who's relatively new and maybe has only read some of her fiction? What are some of the best ways for someone who's new to access and find some of these many essays? Well, a lot of them on the Ironman Institute website for free. So on the Ironman Institute website on the campus, I think, and these essays are free. So you can read them online for free. Otherwise, I've got them all downloaded onto my iPad and I can flip it open and read any essay I feel like any time. So yeah, I would definitely download books like The Voice of Reason, Philosophy Who Needs It, Rooch of Selfishness, Capitalism Under an Ideal, and then just read an essay a day, an essay a week. And when you run out there, there are other places you can find more essays or just go online and read an essay a week up there until those get exhausted. There's plenty, plenty of essays overall. So it's incredibly prolific. Thank you. What we need today, what I call the new intellectual, would be any man or woman who is willing to think, meaning any man or woman who knows that man's life must be guided by reason, by the intellect, not by feelings, wishes, whims, or mystic revelations. Any man or woman who values his life and who does not want to give in to today's cult of the stare, cynicism, and impotence and does not intend to give up the world to the dark ages and to the role of the collectivist broads. All right, before we go on, reminder, please like the show. We've got 163 live listeners right now, 30 likes. That should be at least 100. I figure at least 100 of you actually like the show. Maybe they're like 60 of the Matthews out there who hate it. But at least the people who are liking it, I want to see a thumbs up. There you go. Start liking it. I want to see that go to 100. All it takes is a click of a thing, whether you're looking at this. And you know the likes matter. It's not an issue of my ego. It's an issue of the algorithm. The more you like something, the more the algorithm likes it. So if you don't like the show, give it a thumbs down. Let's see your actual views being reflected in the likes. But if you like it, don't just sit there. 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