 What happened in the 1970s is this inequality debate in a sense hit a kind of a brick wall. And the brick wall is the American spirit. Americans don't like the idea of equality. We just reject it. It's somehow wrong. We admire achievement. We admire success. Historically, Americans have looked at wealthy people and said, wow, I want to be like that. I want to be successful. And they've attributed people success to their own abilities, to their own hard work, to their own innovation, to the use of their own life. So when the left started talking about these issues of inequality and we want to achieve equality, Americans rebelled against it. Why has it come back again? How are you going to get the American people to buy into this idea? Well, the only way to do that is to undercut the idea of success and the idea of individuals. And that I think is what the left has been dedicating itself a long time, to prep the American people so that we become much more accepting of the idea, the idea of equality, the idea of the evil of inequality.