 It always asks people, what do you think an iPhone would look like if the government produced it? And then, of course, there's the whole question of education. We fail our poor by providing them with rotten education. But the only way to solve that is to bring innovation, entrepreneurship, and ultimately the profit motive into education. And the only way to do that is to privatize it. If you care about education of poor people, if you care about education of everybody, then the best way to provide high quality education is to privatize it. Always ask people, what do you think an iPhone would look like if the government produced it? Yeah, everybody laughs, right? Everybody laughs, right? Because it would be a monster. It would be horrible. It wouldn't work. It would be big. It would be ugly, right? So we trust markets to produce a beautiful iPhone. But you know what? The brains of your child you trust the government with. You don't trust them to produce an iPhone, but the education of your child you trust them with. I don't. And I would like to see the same innovation, the same competition, the same entrepreneurship in the most important field in human endeavor, education. I'd like to see that in education. I'd like to see the best product, the best educational product win. That is how I'd like our children to be educated.