 And the only moral system, the only economic system, social system, that actually leaves us free, leaves us alone to pursue our values, to pursue our choices, to act in ways that we judge to be right for us, is capitalism. Capitalism, therefore, is the only moral system. It's the only system that leaves the individual free to live their lives, leaves the individuals free to pursue their own judgment, and therefore their own happiness ultimately. And even a little bit of coercion is a strain on your choices, a strain on your action, and therefore is immoral, and therefore must be avoided in a political system. In politics, we define this freedom of action, this idea that you should act free of coercion. You should act based on your own judgment in pursuit of your own values without coercion and force and judge and authority. That's what individual rights are. The concept of individual rights is basically a moral concept that says that in pursuit of your life, in pursuit of your values, in pursuit of your thinking, of your reason, you must be left free. You must be left free to act on that reason, on that judgment. So it's kind of a moral principle that is the bridge between morality and politics. So capitalism as a shortcut basically is the system that protects individual rights, where the government protects individual rights and does nothing else. And those individual rights are the freedoms that goes in the freedom from force. So we all know, or should know, that capitalism works, capitalism is efficient, that capitalism produces wealth, that anyway we allow people to be free, they produce, they create, they generate wealth. But the world doesn't understand if the capitalism is small and the reason it doesn't understand. It's not because, it's not because, you know, they don't understand capitalism or they don't understand how it works, they don't understand economics of the reason they don't get it is because they don't get morality.