 I love the epistemological challenges, the micron variants, the basic supposition is that 99% of what's in the news isn't terribly important, but some of it is important. The micron variant I think are going to come out to be quite important. Remember when the news started becoming focused on COVID? Just because it's in the news doesn't mean it's wrong. It doesn't mean it's stupid. It doesn't mean it's irrelevant to your life. There are tips and tricks to reporting the news, but one of them is not the news is always wrong. So we're talking to people who think, ah, this is over hype because they're used to watching the news every night and they know how the news likes to hype things. But it sounds to me like the hype is real for the Omicron variant. So remember when Delta came along a few months ago and now 99% of all cases in the US are the Delta variety? So it wouldn't be surprising if the Omicron variant of the coronavirus has become thumb. Now, as I said on this channel, that viruses only mutate to become less deadly. That's true of a very long life time, but for a while, for years, they can mutate and become more deadly. Now, they become so deadly that they wipe out all forms of life and obviously they can't transmit themselves. They're looking at the Kujib, so COOGE, that's Kujib. The Kujib Surf Hike Saving Club. There was a big article in The New York Times, that Amy and Kave, they corresponded to The New York Times about how taking up a life-saving changes life. So it's quite the thing to do is to involve a life-saving. Australia is very much a huge culture. Now we've got a new variant and it won't necessarily just mutate to becoming less deadly. It will very well mutate to becoming more deadly. Now, I'm highly skeptical that the vaccines are not going to provide some protection. I think the anti-vax position with regard to the COVID vaccines, most of how well-established vaccines that have been tested and authorized for use in the United States, I think it's low IQ and stupid and anti-society. Because the way that we wipe out all sorts of diseases, such as polio, and we use small parks and chicken parks and mumps and things like that, is with vaccines. So I think that vaccines are the best way forward with regard to COVID. But as long as the lives of a number of people are vaccinated, then the virus can mutate like what we're seeing with this new variant. So if more people get vaccinated, then there's likely we'll have to have these damaging and dangerous mutations and less likely we'll have to mass pandemics and spread and people in hospital and people dying. So no one thing provides perfect protection. But getting vaccinated is nearly as reduced as your chances of getting hospitalized seriously ill or dying from COVID. So President Biden and the CDC are saying that people can get the booster shot. This will be as protection against the Emma Cron variant. And it's because Biden says that the CDC says it doesn't mean it's wrong. That could very well be what's going to happen. I find it very difficult to believe that booster shots with the other vaccines are going to provide some protection. And just because they may not provide perfect protection, why not? Vaccine protection doesn't mean vaccines provide zero protection. So is natural immunity better than vaccine immunity? Holistic fallacy that oh, if it's natural, it must be good. Well, I don't mind that. It's because it's natural doesn't mean it's good. But just because it's a vaccine also doesn't automatically mean that it's more effective than having some low level infection and developing natural immunity. So natural immunity is not always better and not always worse. So I don't need to take any strong position on things that I don't know very much about. But I can avoid the naturalistic fallacy. Thank you. No, just because it's natural, then therefore it's automatically better. Or just because it's unnatural and cooked out by scientists, therefore it's better. So help me shocked if two shots of the vaccine and a booster don't provide some protection against Omicron. Isn't natural immunity like 13 times better than the shots? It's not all clear. A long article in the Wall Street Journal talking about scientists are debating. So you'll find studies that go into. Some studies will say that natural immunity is better. Other studies say that vaccination immunity is better. I don't understand why you wouldn't want as much immunity as possible. So I don't understand why some of them have COVID wouldn't also want to get the vaccine given that there's actually no downside to getting the vaccine and a considerable upside that it just provides greater protection. So it makes sense to me that getting booster shots is probably the smartest thing that people can do to prepare for the Omicron variant. And just because the virus is mutating doesn't mean it's mutating in a less deadly direction. It could very well mutate in a more deadly direction. Eventually, the coronavirus will mutate in a less deadly direction. But how many millions of people will die first? Why take that chance? Now, reading the news it seems like according to South African doctors the symptoms of Omicron are quite mild. We have two Omicron cases in New South Wales, which is where I'm at. I don't believe you have any in the United States. But of course it's eventually going to spread everywhere. And we went now for about two or three more weeks how effective the various vaccines are. But I'll eat my Omicron if they don't provide some protection. And I don't see what's so horrifying about having to get booster shots every year. That's so horrifying about getting a flu shot every year. So if that's the dominant medical advice, get a booster shot every year, I'm going to get the booster shot. I would, I care. What's the downside to me? I feel crappy for now too. The control is horrifying. If you have a job, you're controlled. I don't see what's horrifying with a mandatory vaccination. You have to stop at a red light. You have to obey traffic laws. You have to file a tax return. Do I have another video interview with Andrew Fraser? No, not yet. But sure we can do another one in the future. So there are many advantages living in a society. There's also a price to be paid. That is the society is going to make demands on you. There are many restrictions, including mandatory vaccinations. What do I think about Andrew Fraser's take on COVID? I completely disagree. So I admit I am surprised how distant politics leads to distant perspectives on COVID. It now sounds obvious when I say it out loud, but it never occurred to me. People who have a distant take on politics would then develop a distant take on public health issues like COVID. So naive and silly. I trust the doctors that are against the COVID-19. I don't. They're very much on the fringe. So there's overwhelming scientific consensus in the other direction. But maybe like with theology, people who are more liberal in their theology tend to be more liberal in their politics. And so people who are more traditional in their theology tend to be more traditional in their politics. And so people who are dissident in their politics tend to be dissident in their public health beliefs as well. I was not expecting that, but now it starts to mess up. Fringe doesn't necessarily mean it's wrong. That's absolutely right. I agree with you. Fringe doesn't mean it's wrong. And we are now not a public health expert. But sometimes the fringe is right. But how does it usually work? Usually the dominant perspective wins out. The perspective of places like Harvard and MIT and Stanford University. Usually that wins out. Now, it's not always right. So institutions have biases. So when you spot the biases, then you can have a better understanding of what people are coming from. I haven't spoken to Eric Stryker in probably three years. So again, people find out that the conventional wisdom has been lying to them about something and then they become intoxicated with dissident perspectives. People find out that the news has been lying to them about something and then they tend to overreact. They think, oh, the news is going to be reliable around them. Eric Stryker is still around. He writes a lot for Ones.com. Pidget Span's is going to do a live stream on toilet formalization and social symbols. Yeah, so Richard has a lot of interesting things to say. He's very entertaining and compelling. Now, there's a big price of being consistently compelling and entertaining. And that is very likely not to be terribly reliable. If you're constantly coming out with hot takes, which dispensers does, then you're probably not going to be very reliable. So sometimes the truth is boring. What's your primary allegiance? Is it to the truth? I'd like to think my primary allegiance is to the truth. But if your primary allegiance is to the truth, then a lot of your opinions are going to be boring. Right? You're not going to have a hot take if your primary allegiance is to the truth. Because sometimes the truth is dull. Hey, Jim Bowden. How are you, mate? Thank you so much for your hospitality. Thank you for taking me up to see Andrew Fraser. Thank you for your generosity. How long ago did Jean podcast guessing Eric Stryker my keenark? If it's pictures, but he's not amputated during the Charlottesville trial? Yeah, I'm not sure why they didn't get caught up in that. Because my keenark is the number two teaching speaker. So that is weird. But why were they not amputated? They just follow better legal advice? Oh, frame game radio. Yeah, it has disappeared. So I assume that there was enough pressure that was applied to him. And the pressure got to him. And yet to consider his career, his social standing, his bank account, his happiness level. And from this outside perspective, it seems like he made the right choice. I presume that if he continued the path that he was going, he would have been the object of coordinated attack. But a hard time imagining experts don't budge their studies so as to not give ammunition to conservatives in the far right. Well, think about the incentives that they operate on. Once an expert is caught budging a study, his career is finished. That's it. Right? No more. So given the incentives, it doesn't surprise me that professors generally speaking could not use their studies. Because let's say you've been working in an area for 30 years, your career is over, your social standing is over. They can work collectively, but if you're caught budging your studies, your career is over. That's it. Everything that you've devoted your life to is finished. So people have an incentive not to destroy their lives, and you've caught force-frying data. Your life as a researcher and as an academic is over. And the Babylonian Hebrew distanced himself from Western politics due to status aspirations. I think so. Stephen J. Gord has experienced a considerable loss of status. Now, he's dead, but his professional reputation is very weak because of the duplicity with which he operated. Oh, man, I love the beach. It's such a healthy place to be. Most impactful research is done by a handful of experts in a given field. Well, they usually build upon other people's work. So it's the most impactful research. It's not just overwhelming the work of lone geniuses. People work together. They build on each other's research. When was the last time 40 went to the beach in L.A.? I'm trying to remember. Not necessarily such a great experience in pollution. In Santa Monica and Venice beaches, it's not hard to find a study. It depends on the study. Are there sharks in L.A.? Rarely, a few. But there's been a replication crisis in academia. So if your study doesn't replicate, you lose status. So think about what happened to Amy Cutting. Do I see an ending site with a homeless issue in L.A.? Yes, that which cannot continue won't. So even liberals are sick of homeless encampments. So there's a steady shift against homeless encampments. A shift from just giving, giving, giving, providing, providing, providing to doing whatever it takes to get them off the street. So homeless is destroying the quality of life in Los Angeles. And so there's a shift against just allowing them to take occupied positions around town. So eventually politicians will respond to incentives. How would I respond to people who say politics is all a show, that voting doesn't matter? Well, there are just too many examples where voting does matter. So Ronald Reagan made a difference. The size of the federal government went down by 1%. So from something like 20 to 19%, the American economy boom, we won the Cold War. So your tax rates vary depending on who's in power, quality of your healthcare is affected, quality of a response to a crisis like COVID is affected. A 1% difference, that's an enormous difference, going from say 20% of the GMP to 19%. So Reagan and Thatcher made a profound difference in Western economics and politics. If I've done an interview with Black Pigeon, no. I would be interested in talking to you. It says a lot of interesting things. Now, here's the challenge facing people like Black Pigeon and myself and Richard Spencer or any pundit is that you're never going to maintain an audience saying things that people can just get in the New York Times. On the other hand, the easiest way to keep pumping our thoughts takes is to fall in for conspiracy theories. Should women be allowed to rule over a country in the capacity of prime minister, president, et cetera? So I don't believe YouTube allows you to say no to that. So certainly in Orthodox Judaism, which is my culture, which is my people, there are different roles for men and women, but even in Orthodox Judaism, things are changing somewhat. So I thought the roles were formally not allowed to women and now getting extended to women even in parts of Orthodox Judaism. So I am not repelled by the idea of different roles for different people. To go to my air was a prime minister of Israel. Israel is a secular state. The Orthodox have some influence, but they don't rule. That is beautiful there. I just love the sound of the ocean. I just love the energy that comes off the waves and the foam. It's just good for the Neshama. You can see why I want to move here and I've done quite well with my Australian paperwork. Oh man, am I enjoying myself? Absolutely, Alex. G'day mate, how are you? Oh, just beautiful of the beach. Heath Woods retweeted a clip of Dover stating that American rabbis support multiculturalism. I am in Kudji, eastern suburbs of Sydney. When was the last time I was in Australia? May, June of 2014. So it's been seven and a half years. Why did I pick up from the Kama Square House? I picked up a nasal spray. I like to use a nasal wash every day. I picked up Q-tips and rubbing alcohol. I don't like it when my ears get itchy so I like to use Q-tips and rubbing alcohol on the inside of my ears every day. I picked up nasal strips with my nose. I think just go to Amazon and put in nasal wash and get the first one that Amazon suggests. So a plastic bag's still been given out. I think you have to pay 20 or 30 cents for a plastic bag. So it's kind of crazy that so many countries, including Australia, crack down on plastic bags and then we have COVID when you do want people getting new bags. What's the cuisine like in Sydney? So many posh shops and fancy restaurants, right? Just amazing. There's so much money sloshing around here. So that ocean that you hear behind me and see behind me, there's an ocean of money in Sydney that's sloshing around. There's so much money here. Australia's had 27 years of uninterrupted economic growth that may have had a bit of a depth during COVID. But prior to that, 27 straight years of economic growth. Australia's gotten so rich and quickly the eastern suburbs, no riffraff here, incredibly expensive real estate. The shops are just filled with fancy high-priced goods like a scoop of ice creams like $5. Yeah, normally there would be soiled diapers floating in the ocean at Zuma Beach. So Australians take picking up trash pretty seriously, just like certain Californians. I think Luke still misses the homeless in Venice Beach. Are there more Orthodox Jews in L.A. than Sydney? Yeah, absolutely. So there are about 35,000 Jews in Sydney compared to about 600,000 in Los Angeles. So there are about 20 times as many Jews in Los Angeles compared to Sydney. Isn't Australia's wealth merely the result of being China's resource bitch? Well, if you agree to sell resources to someone, I don't see why that makes you their bitch. So no, that's not the sole cause, but how significant is that 50% of Australia's economic growth over the past 27 years? Good question. But Australia was about the richest country in the world to a capita 100 years ago, and it's not the richest in the world to a capita now, but it has a pretty good standard of living. So Australia's got an educated populace. It has about five universities in the top 100. China only has about two universities in the top 100. So there's a tech industry here. Financial industry is strong stock market in Sydney. So I don't know enough about Australia's economy. It seems pretty strong. And China basically stopped importing everything it could. Financial industry here is big, but the tech is insignificant. Whoa! My childhood at home looked awesome. Yeah, surrounding woods and creek. Yeah, wonderful place to wander around in. It was, right? So parents gave kids a lot more freedom back then. I could just go off to the woods and wander around all day from about age six onward. Like wander around, come home for lunch. How much is that house worth now? Oh, the one I grew up on on Curran's Road. Not sure, but not nearly as much as homes here in eastern Sydney. I love this sandstone. Look at this sandstone. Could you handle Sydney gang's problem uptake of drive-by shootings? More education programs? I would suggest being very careful about who you import. I only care about the Australian variant on screen. Bring back the juice from the US, the secret sauce. So I would say be very careful about immigration, and then I would say be very tough on crime. So people who commit crimes, lock them away for a long time. To me that's the best answer to crime problems. Yeah, I had lots of midnight cricket. So the Sydney Cricket Ground is about five miles from me. So we're importing a minimum of 3,000 Afghan refugees to make this place a lot more vibrant. They're going to bring a whole new cuisine and we're going to learn from them new ways of doing things. 3,000 minimum. Prime Minister said 3,000 minimum, not 300. So what kind of work would I do here? I guess I'd be somebody's bitch. I'd be an assistant or go into sales. Teach a little Alexander technique. Do some live streams. Interview some people on my podcast. What do I think about Jack Dorsey stepping down to CEO of Twitter? I don't have any strong opinion about Jack Dorsey. I don't hate the men. Okay, prayers, keep me in your thoughts and prayers. This sandstone, isn't that gorgeous? That's why you'll often see people swimming in protected ocean pools right by the ocean. They're not just sharks, but they're stingrays, like the one that killed that Aussie guy who was always messing around with animals. Steve Irwin, yeah, I think he died by a stingray. So they're stingrays that could hurt you. And what else out there? They're like very nasty stings you can get from some jellyfish. So some people wear protective body suits. I'm not going to go for that stuff. Right, I'm not going to be one of those live streamers who falls to his death either. Like jellyfish, yeah. Jellyfish are brutal. Okay, I can make this if I try. On a wing and a prayer. Am I a fan of Ben Shapiro? No, I mean, I'm sure he sometimes has some good things to say, but... Yeah, learn to code. I think maybe sales, something that will express my outgoing personality to the government. I just, everyone I know works for the government seems kind of depressed. I'm not sure I want to work for the government. Hey, here in Randwick, so the suburb I think is called Randwick, everybody gets five gigs of free Wi-Fi. You'll do nothing and get paid good money. It just sounds terribly depressing working for the government. Man, I love the ocean. Love a good wave. There's a good Aussie channel called Post Rescue Night Guard spending off the sharks. Don't jump. The adoption becomes the rescue. Provide Luke's juniors. You can work for the private sector if you want more money. Yeah, I want more money. It just... Just people who work for the government generally seem depressed. That's just my experience. Maybe it's different here in Australia. Isn't this a... I bet you just love our ocean, folks. We have the best ocean, don't we? I mean, what an amazing ocean. Aussie News is going to live stream with Tom Longo. More work in the private sector. Yeah. I think I'll set up a surf camp. And maybe I'll start a mission for fallen women. Okay, a lot of deadly animals here in Australia. But I would think that there aren't going to be many snakes. Don't you hate it when you're in this beautiful, idyllic ocean overlook and there's some bloody dude with his gimbal live streaming and wrecking the peace and quiet. Making a racket. Good thing I got the vitality of a 37-year-old man. So I just have to get connected. Such a vibrant Jewish community here. So I get connected as I meet people. And that's where I'm going to find a job. Here in the Siddi Jewish community, someone's going to want a high quality, dedicated employee with a spotless reputation. Someone who's respectable, educated, well-spoken, well-dressed, erudite, upstanding, moral. There's someone whistling at me. People are always whistling at me. They always want a piece of the 40. So I think I just have to do a few more live streams. Catch the eye of the Siddi Jewish community. And they're going to get me a job. I've filled out all the paperwork. Get an Australian tax ID number. Get an Australian Medicare. This is huge, right? What do you think? Look all right to you. See if you can get a few decades of back pay from Santa Link. So Santa Link is like the Australian Welfare Office. That's where you get unemployment. So, oh yeah. Someone who's highly professional and highly successful with the shielders. Luke will leave. It's not enough Jews. I don't know, mate. I just feel so good. It's like an emotional decision I'm making. Like, my sister showed me, you know, on a feast time, this area. And I never considered moving here. Once I experienced it, maybe I just needed to be at a certain level of humility. It's really just going to be paradise when the sea level rises. I don't know, it was an emotional decision. I came here and it happened on my live stream. I just came here for a holiday. And then I, hmm, I love the smell of the sea. And I thought, I just want to stay here. I don't want to go. I just feel comfortable here. Mate, my mateship is all around me. And I've got so many friends in Sydney. You realize that friends, friends, Romans, countrymen, who are lending me their ears. And you ride the public transport here and it's not a horrible alienating experience. Like, it's a perfectly nice experience. Meet people. I was looking for the Sydney Opera House and I met someone who performed at the Sydney Opera House. It was an actor. Probably did something illegal there. And if this is a police date, then give me more tyranny. Survival on the coast, right? Strong salt-laden winds from the sea bend trees and shrubs into amazing shapes. Yeah, don't step out on our native flora or we'll beat you back to LA. Okay. Lesson noted, mate. Lesson noted. Got to be respectful of the native flora and fauna around here. Now, I haven't seen anyone huffing gasoline. So I've only seen like one or two aboriginals since I've been in Sydney. So they only make up less than half percent of Australia's population. And they don't tend to reside in the cities, particularly not the eastern suburbs, which are incredibly expensive. So I've had a very nice coastal lunch at Peter Mech's. Been to Shul here in Sydney. Met with some rabbis. I'm going to join some local groups. It's going to be a place for me, mate. Keep an eye on any gasoline in the traveling. What's the reason for the overall skeptical anti-vaccine response to COVID from right? Well, I think part of it is unique to America in that the American right tends to be very anti-government. I remember Ronald Reagan said government. It's not the solution to the problem. Government is the problem. So that's widespread in the American right. Much less widespread in the Australian right. The government is the problem. So I think that's part of the reason. Also, Americans increasingly have less in common. So the country is more polarized. And so in a polarized situation, everything becomes political. And so Donald Trump played a role, I think, in politicizing. You're going to sell your gun in L.A. Whatever I do, I'm going to make sure it's by the box that it's legal. So in Australia, they've largely had a political consensus. From the right to the left of the center has been dominantly a consensus about how to deal with COVID. And so they form like a national cabinet with the premiers of the states bringing in the opposition leader of a party as well as the ruling conservative coalition. So there's been a strong backlash against expertise. There's been a popular backlash that has just had tremendous skepticism of experts. So I think there was a New Yorker cartoon where some guy stands up on a plane and he says, haven't you had about enough of these pilots who think they're so much better than the rest of us? How many of you would vote for me to fly the plane? So when it comes to flying a plane, I want a pilot flying the plane. It's possible that someone who doesn't have a pilot's certificate could do a good job flying the plane, but I prefer to trust my life with certified pilots. So if I break my leg and someone's going to set my leg, I would want someone who's a health professional who's certified. So obviously the experts aren't always right, and the experts have incentives that shape how they react for events and shape the advice that they give. So sometimes the populace are right, but just to have a knee-jerk disregard for expertise I think is silly. You can legally own any two firearms you want to, which would I pick. So a lot harder, a lot more demanding, a lot more restrictions, a lot more onerous to own a fire gun in Australia compared to that. So the populace revolt against expertise I think has a lot to do with anti-vax, anti-lockdown sentiments. COVID is a eugenic force, and I am pro-eugenic, so COVID is not much of a concern to me. Right, so maybe COVID will primarily take out the weak and the old who would otherwise occupy a lot of social welfare spending, that's what you're arguing, and that as a result of COVID, that is the weak and the second the old who are going to be picked off, and that will mean that the governments will have to spend less on social welfare. Knocks off the frail and unhealthy and obese, so that's the argument then. Yeah, I understand that. So there's a good article in The New York Times Sunday magazine about all the adventures, the advances that would come from COVID. So we're going to advance socially, culturally, technologically, like we realize that we don't have to work in the office nearly as much so that more people can work from home. We've opened up so that people can do more telemedicine appointments and teletherapy. So going to be a lot of positive developments coming out of COVID. We're spending a lot more on science, and we're going to be much better equipped to deal with pandemics in the future, I would expect. I haven't seen any days, right? So they may well be here, but I haven't seen them. But, oh, I did Andrew Fraser had a Japanese toilet, a very fancy toilet. You push button and the seat goes down. So very high-tech Japanese toilet. It wasn't a bidet, but I was very impressed. Very fancy. So I remember I once had dinner at Eugene Vollack's house and I couldn't get the toilet seat to rise up because it was child-proof. And so I ended up breaking it. I had dinner there with Kathy Sype circa 2006. I don't know how to deal with like a child-proof toilet seat. So you don't see a restroom here. You see toilet or loo. Prostitution is legal in Australia, probably in some areas. So Australia is a federal system like the United States. Yeah, the Japanese are starting to be known for their fancy toilets. Australia is a federal system. So there's a lot of regional diversity. So states have set many of their own policies with regard to COVID because COVID poses different threats to different states. So COVID is much more severe in Victoria and New South Wales and say Queensland or Western Australia. It's rained every day since I've been in Australia, right? It's not supposed to be like this. It's like wettest November in about 20 years. I'm told hasn't gotten higher than about 74 degrees. So I just feel happy here. I just feel a sense of ease. My fellow Aussies, it's just a sense of mateship, right? You just make mates wherever you go. Aw, mate. How's it going, mate? No worries, mate. Mateship. You get that also in Orthodox Judaism wherever you go because it's segregated by sects and so you get to hang out with blokes. Blokes are great, aren't they? Blokes are the best. I feel so comfortable and happy just hanging out with blokes. So you shouldn't have to go to a strict spot just to be with blokes. Mateship. I guess Australia's always been a more cohesive and homogeneous society than the United States. So you just have each other's back and help each other out. I haven't had any shrimp on the barbie. I'm a vegetarian, mate. Our Sydney girls is tattooed as American girls. Not as much, but it's still far more prevalent than what I remember. So in a way, it's good because it just tells you who's trash, right? Just tells you who's low class and who makes really bad decisions spontaneously. So yeah, it's amazing how you can be on the other side of the world and just live streaming. So I love tattoos and it's just concerning how many tattoos I see here. I need to thank the high quality Wi-Fi here in the suburb of Brandwick, man. I've been live streaming for 52 minutes and it hasn't cut out once. Yeah, tattoos are a mark of low impulse control and bad decision making. And also someone is searching for identity, right? Because people aren't as religious as they used to be. Therefore they're finding new ways to assert an identity. And I think tattoos are like a low class way of asserting your identity. Yeah, Australia's an island that really helps with the immigration control. So Australia's turned back illegal immigrants and when they do let in immigrants they generally tend to be more educated, more intelligent more qualified than the average Australian. So what's that out there on the ocean? You can see the whales coming through here. Oh, that's some kind of bird out there. It's swimming along on the ocean, I guess. Looking for fish. It's been great to hear the crookaburra. So this is like country in the city. So everywhere there's a park, birds, abundant nature. At the same time you're in the middle of the city. A city of over 5 million people. The biggest city in Australia. So once someone would tell me, oh, don't go down there, it's a busy road. It's like a quiet country road. So remember during COVID how I started talking a lot more about Australia? So during COVID and the lockdown I started reading all these books on Australia. And how do we get around? Okay, there I see. So my turn back towards Australia happened during COVID. I started ending any of my shows with the, I still call Australia home. So how do you get along the beach? On here. That's the way out. That's the way around. So yeah, during the lockdown I started reading all these books on Australia. And now I get to make it real. In a sense we're in glasses today, mate. Oh, I don't think we have any bidets here. How do we get around? How do I go south along the ocean? How do I go south along the ocean? Thank you mate, I really appreciate it. Oh, here you go. No worries. I need to start dressing like Crocker, how do I be? God's backyard, mate. I've been to cities that never closed down. From New York to Rio to London Town. Wherever I go, it's one thing. I still call Australia. I still call Australia home. I think as you get older, you become more ethnocentric. Because of my Australian accent being accelerated, you bet it has. So people can tell that I'm not a yank. They can hear, they can hear the yank influence. But they can still hear a bit of the ochre. So every day I get more Australian. I get more fair dinkum. I can't believe the excellent sound Canadian. Oh, mate. Where's the ocean? I don't want to go on private property. Where do you go? That's private property, isn't it? Where are the quarantine cans? Surely this isn't the way. Oh, this is private. Definitely don't want to go this way. Sorry, mate. So, private property inspectors. Is Sydney sure you use Ashkenazi pronunciation? Most shawls will use Ashkenazi pronunciations. So, back to the beach walk. What happened to the beach? This is discouraging. So Australia is like one of those rare countries where you can walk under so much private property and not get shot. Where you're thirsty, you can go to the hose and have a drink. Where's the ocean? I want the ocean side straw. This is boring. This ain't something.