 Talking about Bashar al-Assad, they have a very big song going on singing about him that it goes Allah, Suria, Basar, Obas. Have you heard it before? No. No. My point is that it's very, very, in my opinion, talking about the conflict. It gets hard to take an angle. In a specific case, talking about the Middle East, I think it's relatively easy. No. If you know the history, I don't think it's that hard. Yeah, the government made a 9-11 that the Americans did, and then they blamed it. Okay, but let me tell my point of view. Okay, I listen to you for like two hours, but then it's stated. Okay, then if you'll say you should think. Okay, another spin on the refugee. On the what? On the refugees. On refugees, okay. No, but this is, this is what I say, is private in the West for equality and the focus on it. Yeah. But do you think that has impacted much on how we view the refugees or the ones we accept to our borders? I mean, we basically, in both Sweden, Germany, and all other European states have said that as long as you're fleeing from a war, it's okay, but not if you want to enhance your life. Yeah, well, yes. So suffering is a standard for help, which I think is the wrong standard. I don't think that's a standard by which you should decide whether to help or not, whether to bring people in. But I think it's deeper than that. And I'm going to say some controversial things that are going to upset people, but tough. You're just telling your point of view. It says my point of view. It's only my point of view. I happen to think it's the truth. I happen to think it's a truth, but you don't have to agree with it. No, no, your truth, right? No, I think there is a truth. But again, you don't have to agree with me. You can, you can say I'm full of shit. That's fine. But it's my point of view. I think the deeper problem in Europe and in the West generally is the issue of multiculturalism. It's the idea that all cultures are equal in some way. And I think this is a deep, deep problem in Europe. And I think a deep, deep problem everywhere. I don't think it's true. Cultures are not equal. And European culture has forgotten or repressed what made it great. I believe that the culture developed in Europe during the Enlightenment is the greatest culture in human history. And I think every culture in the world should emulate it. So the problems in the Middle East, in my view, would be solved if people were free. If people had respect for two concepts that come from Greece originally, but were developed during the Enlightenment in Europe. And those two concepts are reason as a means of knowing reality, a dedication to reason that went through that period and was reflected in the founding of America. And because of a dedication to reason, individualism. Individualism comes out of our dedication for reason. Because who reasons? Only individuals reason. So if you combine reason and individualism, they are what make a great culture. And they are what we should be exporting to the world. It's the idea that we should be encouraging every people in the world to embrace. And if you embrace reason and individualism, many of the problems all over the world, South America, Asia, and indeed the countries that have embraced it have done well. And the countries that have not embraced it haven't done well. So to the extent that Asian countries, Japan, to some extent China, certainly South Korea, Taiwan, and Hong Kong, and Singapore have embraced the ideas of reason and individualism, some explicitly, some implicitly, they've done phenomenally well. To the extent that they have, other countries have not. They've done very, very poorly. But we in Europe, instead of saying this is what we stand for, this is what it means to be European, if you will. These are the concepts that we stand behind. This is what, if you want to come here, this is what you should embrace. Just like in America, the idea was, if you come to America, it used to be, if you come to America, you should embrace the idea of the Constitution, Declaration of Independence, what they represent. We don't do that in America today, and you don't do it in Europe anymore. And I think that's a disaster. You don't give the people the opportunity to rise up, want to rise up. If the people coming here don't have the same level of income more, then you will enhance inequality here. But if you look at the people coming, say people from Somalia or up in Somber, there's not really a war, but conditions are harsh. Then that would increase inequality here, but you would get another view of the refugee. This focus on equality basically says that we only allow certain types of refugees. Can you give me a little bit more specific? I've never been to Harvard, I've never been to class there, but can you give me an example? That's your advantage. Oh, thank you. Of how they are teaching sacrifice, how they are teaching altruism? Well, open daily paper and look at Mr. Carter, a peculiar creature, who is telling you that we're going to overcome the oil shortage by driving this, by giving up. Let us all make a sacrifice. Let's lower our standard of living and we'll all be living better. Now is that a proper philosophy to tell a country that has pride and self-esteem? At one time, with all the faults in American intellectual equipment, and there were a lot of faults, at least people were taught pride in their own country. And in the good aspects, the great achievements of this country, today you're supposed to apologize to every naked savage, and you were on the globe because you were more prosperous, because you've earned your money. You have to feel guilty and apologize for it while he hasn't and doesn't intend to learn from you. He just wants your money. That's what we're being taught.