 I mean, it is inconceivable for any Western democracy to subsist even for ten years more if we didn't have, through progressive taxation, a steady transfer of resources from rich people to poor. Well, I consider that we can begin to talk about the world environment and about safeguarding our planet when we, the rich nations, are giving, in perfectly formal, institutionalized tax assistance. Oh, at least one percent of our gross national product in development capital for the poor nations, I would go higher myself if we've got to stop lecturing them while we sit back and ingress 80 percent of the world's income for 20 percent of the world's people. And that, I think, is the critical thing on this development environment issue of the planet that you see from the moon, a single full of life, and the only single planet that's got these qualities, that that vision, especially among the young, can mean a redirection of how people think about this problem, because you will not create a community unless you've got some moral commitment. And moral commitment needs some very stern underpinnings, because we ain't moral easy. Mr. Pay, in this ceremony, which is on it, three distinguished citizens of the free world, President Pusey, Father Bunn, and our friend from the world of freedom, Lady Jackson. What worries me is that so great is the shortage of capital, so obstructed are the means of development, that they won't even be able to learn from our mistakes. That is the, that would be ultimate tragedy. I mean, for us to go and make the mistakes and then no one to learn from them, that really would be a cosmic bad joke.