 Let's read. Okay, check this out. I got reading from Sisterhood of Steel. Okay. If we get a chance, we'll read that. We got a reading from... this is resistance. Yes, yes, yes. This is resistance. Gemini blood. We're gonna do a reading from this. Okay. We've got Sandman as well. But let me do... let me do this one. Okay. It's a one-pager, this one. We'll do a couple of readings. Okay. Since we've got resistance or at least explanation. Right? So, this series came out in... what year did it come out? Small print, small print, small print. 1996. Okay. It is written by Christopher Hens, artist Tommy Lee Edwards. Okay. Let's have a read through this. Here's the cover. And let me find the right pics. Oh, this is one I had to actually take picture with my camera. So, the photo quality might not be great. This is the cover. Right? And we're just gonna read one page. Beef Monster Munch. You're yelling. Question. What do you think of PPL in general? Making up their own science. PPL. I don't know what PPL is. People making up their own science. I don't know. People was PPL. And this is the page we're gonna read. It's the... one, two, three, four, five, six, seventh page in. Okay. Seventh page. And I'm gonna read this. Ready? New San Francisco. Quote. Throughout the reign of human societies, the so-called 99-to-1 rule has governed technological achievement. Although the ratio itself may vary from culture to culture, the essential validity of the theorem cannot be disputed. Whether applied to ancient Sumer, the Holy Roman Empire, 19th century European and American smoke stack civilizations, on the present geo-corporate nation state of 2094, 99-to-1 remains timelessly true. The guy's going up an elevator, so I'm gonna read the bubble there. Floor one, floor 160, floor 170, floor 180. Quote. Simply stated, in order to support 1% of a population in advanced technological status, the other 99% of that world must exist in relative poverty. Just how relative depends upon the degree of wealth concentrated within the society's uppermost classes. In all cases, the richer the rich, the poorer the poor. And it's a dog talking. I've been working on the railroad all my life, live long days, doggies singing. So that's cool. This is from 1996. Okay. That's a very tall building. That's a very tall building.