 Yeah, I mean, Objectivism more so than elsewhere because the heroes of Iron Man's books are perfect in inception. We don't see gold struggling. We certainly don't see Francisco struggling. I mean, there's an emphasis in the novel about how he never struggles, except, except that scene with the table. I mean, Dagny is a massive struggle, but, but generally he's just perfect. Everything he does is perfection. He doesn't seem to have to struggle and make those kind of efforts that most of us do. Yeah. It's more so in Objectivism because, because We're given this ideal. So part of the philosophy in a sense. Yeah. No, I definitely think that's part of it. And I've seen it more times than I can even, you know, count and they say and ended myself and it ever pretty much everyone I know within this community, I think at some almost everyone's very few and notable exceptions. And I mean, I think that is a big part of it. And I think There are pre existing vulnerabilities, I think that we bring that most people bring with them when they discover Objectivism such that it's like a perfect storm of having this lofty ideal held up to us, but in fictionalized deliberately selective form right where we don't. Yeah, like, I mean think about all the things we don't like we don't see them going to the bathroom which thank goodness for that right but we also don't see them getting sick and feeling really dejected and we don't see them falling into old habits that everybody has and sometimes you know has to fight against and getting rejected by women along the way. It's art. It's art. I mean, and we live in a culture that doesn't understand arts and doesn't know what to do with arts. I think that's a big part of it. You know, so it's viewing these as some kind of models or some kind of abstractions they're taken literally. And I literally knew people who try to have sex like they do in the in Atlas Shrug. Yeah, yeah. And so it takes out all the humanity. It's a novel. It's not a recipe for how to live your life on a day-to-day basis. Yeah, although I want to channel Greg here and say, so I agree with all of that and I think the consequences are very real. But just to connect the dots back to what we were saying earlier about people sometimes having a model of the world where like only the negatives count or are real. I think we were talking about this actually before we started the call, but there's actually lots of really rich examples in the novels when it is plot relevant of character, you know, the fact that and I didn't notice some of these until my third or fourth reading. That Rourke throws away most of his designs because they're crap. He's throwing them in the waste bin. That was really surprising to me when I read it and I thought he just always created amazing sketches, just whenever he put his, you know, pencil to paper, you know, and the fact that Well, weird. I mean weird and amazing psychological character. I mean the transition that he makes the psychological changes that he makes, you know, based on the philosophical changes that he's making. are so insightful and so interesting. And many of us are much more like weird and then we would be like John Galt. I mean, when I read the book, the last person in the book I could imagine being is gold. Right. I was 16 and pretty dumb and, you know, and confused and and all this stuff and you just can't couldn't even imagine that and I mean I, I would think of myself more as Eddie Willis but but if you're going to be, you're going to be a giant and weird and as the guy, you're going to be because you're going to have to work it out you're going to have to figure it out you're not just going to have it. And it takes him a long time even having people like Dagnan Francisco around it takes him decades. And he has to go through a really ugly horrible divorce and he has to sell the rights to his best invention. And, you know, he doesn't exactly escape without costs. No, yeah, absolutely. And even, you know, I think some people will read the novels and they'll think, I'm like Katie Halsey or I'm like Cheryl, or, you know, or the wet nurse and, and that can feel really intimidating and threatening for the characters who didn't make it, you know, or even whining. And one thing I want to say about that is, that's healthier than thinking your job goals. That's fair or thinking you're supposed to be. Or you will be just because you had the book or you will be committed to the ideas now. I mean you want to aspire. But you're supposed to already be I mean like I either have to already be like this person, or everything is lost and something's very wrong. Yeah. I'll see that.