 We can continue on. We have a notion of the outlay of information age on society when women are getting more and more educated that women tend to marry up as a cultural model. Part of that is recognizing men provide, which is another way of saying men marry down. Look at it that way. Men don't marry up, they marry down. Based on that, and women marry up, what happens when a woman becomes more educated? She earns more, she has more independence, she's more secure, she's more independent. The pool of available men diminishes dramatically. Throw on that the notion of female entitlement. This notion of special privilege with entitlement and princessdom syndrome. You know, you have women that are saying, never settle. And they have a right to never settle, but there are consequences. And for over three generations of women, women have been told, you can do anything, you can be anything, but there's that unspoken element, there are consequences. And up until fairly recently, the numbers have been small, and there's always been some other man willing to step in to provide. And we can look at the train wreck on those. But the reality is they're starting to become acutely aware that good men have left the building like Elvis. By the time you hit your late 30s, early 40s, good men are no longer available. And what we have is not just a woman who's exercised that notion of education and developing herself in an appropriate way, but there's this delusion of entitlement that good men will be available when she's ready. The consequences is that they're not. And what we have developed is an element of New Age spinsterdom. When you have smart, educated, good-looking women who are single, middle-aged, and they're not able to find relationships because they have not prepared themselves for it, they have not geared themselves for it, and they themselves have priced themselves out of the sexual marketplace. Women, rather than working on their own development, their own skills, their own relationship abilities, start making bullet-point lists of what the next man is going to provide. All she's doing is rotating cast of characters. And the list keeps growing as her market value plummets. This is going to play out in a social level. This is going to affect our society. The other one is a woman who exercises her sexual freedoms in a manner, in a wanton way, who's able to ride the cock carousel in her 20s and early 30s, who all of a sudden decides to get off and realize after paying 15 years of the phallus field that she's worn out, used up, and men don't find her available. And not only that, she actually has an unrealistic appraisal of her sexual market value. A woman who's young, beautiful, and sexual can actually hit above her weight class and by that I mean to be able to be sexually involved with a man who will exchange a relationship for commitment for sex on a temporary basis to get sex, to have access to her at a later time in which she won't be able to get because men won't put up with her behavior. And by the way, the same guy is now moving on to younger women. She's been replaced. And again, you have her slipping into this new-age Spencer Dunn syndrome. Ultimately, the last one I want to bring up very briefly is the fact that women have privileges because of the youth vibrance and the value of sexuality in our society. Men have it a different way. We age differently. Our status rises later. Do not think just because women have sexual privilege and act on it on marrying up and society values it and they can throw that out in the mainstream and be okay with it, that you can do the same when you exercise male privilege. Your male privilege is to get the highest quality woman you can at the best possible time in your life. And it's typically going to be when you're older. Do not think you won't be shamed when you act on it. Older men being sexually active with, marrying, and taking up sexual time with younger, vibrant women who are younger, fitter, hotter, and free of the social baggage of women of his age. Do not think that's socially acceptable. If you doubt me, ask your mother.