 I think if you mentioned your own capitalism to most of the people in the street, that definition is completely corrupted and they don't think you don't know what it means to rise, they think of people who are only presented with money, which is a bad thing and the fact can't selfish people come out of people. So how did that come about and how did that matter? Well, I think to some extent we have that package, a package deal that people have there. You said a number of things that I think capitalism best stands for. For example, selfishness, I think capitalism is selfish. It stands for making lots of money. Sure, it does. And what we need to convince people is that those things are good things, not bad things. That is, people pursuing their own self-interest, people living their lives, the best that they believe, making the most out of their lives is a good thing and that's pretty selfish, right? We need to convince people that who ask for self-interest is good. That they, each one of them, see to me, the bad about capitalism is all about ethics ultimately. It's all about ethics. If we lose the battle on ethics, we lose the fight for capitalism, we win it, we want it, it's easy. If we could convince people that they have a right to live, create a life any way that they choose it as long as they're not violating somebody else's right. And that life is worth living and it's worth making the best and most out of your life. Capitalism is easy because all capitalism is a system that leaves you alone to do that. We can convince people that they are not their brother's key. They're not morally responsible for the group and their neighbor and their community and their race and their ethnic group or whatever the latest fad is. We can convince them that they're not morally responsible for them. They can take care of them if they want to. You know, they're free to help their friends, but they're not morally obligated as the essence of who they are to live for the sake of other people. They're more obligated as they live for themselves and make the most out of their life to thrive. Then you ask them, okay, well, if you want to live the best life that you can live, then the question is what kind of political system will you want a political system that allows you to do that? To pursue what you think is right. You know what, if you think communism is the best thing, if you want to live in a commune, capitalism allows you to do that. You can go off somewhere and start your own commune and live there. The whole notion is that forces are being used. If you want to voluntarily go and live in some ridiculous setup, then that's your business. So the notion is that everybody is willing to think and willing to work is better off. Better off when Big Brother is not telling them what they should and shouldn't do. I think that's the real core of it because if you just talk economics, it's confusing and it's difficult and there's so many things going on, but you have to make it real to people that it's about their choices, it's about their lies, it's about, you know, other people telling them what they should and shouldn't do. Nobody likes that. And that's their appeal. That's why by the way, I'm so appealing to teenagers because that's the age where we've certainly done like me told once in a while. And we've even suddenly, this book legitimizes our wanting to live our own lives our own way. And you know, she gives you a whole idea of what that means and how to do that. But it's appealing to that time in our lives for the challenging age.