 Next question is from Brandon Lee X. What's your main health concern for the next generation? Boy, you know, besides the one that is just on everybody's minds that we talk about all the time, the obesity epidemic and all the issues that that causes, you know, the fertility issues are starting to become really alarming. I don't remember what the statistic was, but young men today have the same fertility as old men did, you know, decades ago, like a few decades ago. Women today are losing their fertility at record rates, even young women. This is a bit alarming because it's like the canary in the coal mine. Like, when you're not healthy, one of the first things that starts to go away is your ability to reproduce. So for men, sperm motility or sperm number starts to go down. Of course, hormones associated with those things start to, you know, reflect that. With women, they start to have much more trouble conceiving and then trouble holding on to a healthy, you know, birth. This is scary because this has profound potential, you know, effects in the future. Now, in my opinion and my strong opinion, this is connected to the health epidemics that we've already been watching, you know, the fact that people are becoming more and more obese, the fact that people are becoming weaker and weaker. This is, by the way, one that we haven't talked about a lot, which is, we all know about the obesity epidemic, but we're just starting to realize that what's going along with that hand-in-hand is this weakness epidemic. So like, for example, there was a study that was done where they tested young men, like college men's grip strength, and these young men's grip strength was like what you see a 60-year-old man in the 1980s, which is, that's released, that's not very good, right? And with women, we also saw, you know, a weakening of their strength as well. This is not a good thing. All of this is not a good thing. So I think what's happening is we're just, this is a reflection of how much we've changed our environment. We've made life very easy. Food is very easily accessible. It's not very healthy, but it tastes really damn good. And our microbiomes are being affected by antibiotics and by chemicals that we're constantly exposed to. And so you've got all these different things coming together, and now the scary thing is happening, which is, holy shit, if we stay down this path, I think the last time I read about this, they said something like by 2040 or something, like not that far from now, like a couple of decades, we would lose our ability to procreate, which is, that's not cool. Yeah, I think just along those lines, the weakness part of it is something that I've really started to see more than venturing outside of our bubble. We talk a lot to people that are in the gym and that are pretty focused on improvement and weight rift, weight rifting, weight rifting, weight rifting. And that's something that they're into. And just getting back into it and realizing that the general public, they're fascinated by working out, like they've never been taught a lot of the skill of working out and being in the gym and lifting weights. And so there's just, to me, it's pretty alarming. I felt like growing up, that was a big part of how you played sports. You had to get better in the gym in order to play better in sports. And I just don't see the same drive and the same appeal that sports used to have, which was a massive outlet for this country and I know elsewhere to display your physical abilities. And I just feel like we've kind of shifted a lot more to video games and like professional video games even. They're making more than professional athletes now. And so it's just interesting to see how the culture shift with all these types of things that have impacted just your average person. I'm going to be a little less of an alarmist. I don't think we're going to see anything. I think we're going to be able to reproduce. I don't think that's going to happen. But that or science will find a way to fucking fix that. And I also think that we tend to go one way and get real extreme and then we all kind of wake up and come the other direction and over correct. But the thing that I notice even about myself, the bad habits or behaviors or the things that I've seen myself start to pick up and do is that we have evolved to a place where very little movement is required to do anything. And it's taking more and more effort to get out and just move, period. You have to plan it. Yeah. I would like to say exercise and strength. That's been a problem forever. I mean, most people didn't strengthen an exercise forever. But what to me is more dangerous or scarier about the future is this how in mobile, I mean, the way the body works is if you don't use it, you lose it. And so I'm worried about the generation coming up. Just we keep making everything so convenient and to your point about video games and your point about things being delivered to you and stuff like that. I mean, we're heading in this direction where you're just not going to move. I mean, not just... There's no real incentive to do it. Right, exactly. There's no incentive to really do it other than hopefully that you would still be able to do it, which I don't know if that's enough motivation for the generation coming up. And I also, again, back to my point, what I see with myself, like we're fitness enthusiasts and I still see how much my behaviors have changed. I mean, I love DoorDash. I use things like that all the time. I have streaming everything now too. And so I don't go out and kill my food or pluck or pick my food. Everything is brought to you. I mean, I don't even go to the grocery store anymore since COVID and got used to using delivery service. So I just... And you just start doing these things and you go, oh, this is so cool and this is so great. But nobody sits down and goes like, oh, you know, in a year's time, on average, I would go to the grocery store, say, 50 times. And in those 50 times, I take X amount of steps, which is X amount of calories. And nobody is factoring that in. You've just pruned that off of your life. And that going forward. And we just keep doing that. So I'm most concerned just about that the generation coming up just flat out moving. Yeah, along those lines, you know that there's a huge increase in kids with back pain and neck pain going to the doctor. And they were blaming it at first on backpacks. In fact, some schools were telling kids, wear in the front and stuff. You know, wear in the front or to have those rolling bags because they think that the problem was, it's not the backpacks. It's that kids are not strong. And they're not moving. And you're seeing forward head. You're seeing forward shoulder. You're seeing really bad posture, back pain. You know, I remember when I first got certified as a trainer, type 2 diabetes wasn't called type 2 diabetes. It was called adult onset diabetes. And that's because only adults got it. So it's something that you developed as an adult through your eating habits and your lifestyle. Well, sometime in the 90s, early 90s, I believe, they changed the name to type 2 diabetes because kids started getting it. Well, back pain was, that's non-existent for kids, for a long time. Like when does a kid, unless a kid hurts themselves, falls off something. But a kid never went to the doctor for chronic back pain. You're now seeing this chronic back pain and chronic neck pain. Well, you see schools eliminating a lot of their physical education because of the funding or whatever the case is. But there's been a lot less emphasis on physical education and outlets, after-school programs and things that they could be a part of. And I really feel passionate about that. That needs to be a massive priority. Total that we shift. They've done such a stupid job with it because, A, they didn't value it. And they said, this is not as important as science and math. They did the same thing to music, by the way. Everything has to be cognitive. Yes. And what we're finding now is music and activity makes you better at everything else. And they're all, they're very, very important. It's all intertwined, yeah. And number two, they've systematically taken out some of the most valuable activities and games out of the, out of recess and out of PE because they're too competitive or because too- Because somebody feels left out. Yes. So stupid. Like the stuff that you learn, what you learn playing games like that are their important lessons. Is their chance to get hurt? These are formative years where you're going to have to learn these challenges. It's better to learn them early than to learn them way later in the workforce and you don't know how to deal with it. Mark my words. The next thing for them to start to remove from schools are test scores. Mark my words. Why? Because some kids get bad scores and they feel bad and you can't have kids feeling bad because everybody needs to feel the same. Mark my words. It's going to fall the same path that we saw with activity, which is totally ridiculous. And I think that'll be the death of public education because parents are going to be like, that's enough. I'm taking my kids out. So anyway.