 The impudence, the audacity, the unmitigated gull of those knuckleheads of liberty podcasters daring to voice opinions outside the mainstream of accepted thought. Listen, if you dare, it's angry, it's funny, it's even sometimes sad, but it's always based on freedom and justice. In the Declaration of Independence has written, Thomas Jefferson wrote these words. We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal, endowed by the Creator with certain unaliberites. And among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. The government is just, it's a Leviathan, it's an enormous monster, it's a monstrosity, and it's sucking the life out of the United States. I kind of like the way you phrased that. Adam Smith and the wealthy nations didn't really come along until 1776, which is actually when we celebrate our independence. That should be taken as something noteworthy, that it took us that long to realize that central planning and having one guy decide everything for everybody from the top, or some thug with the club, if you go back far enough, you know, to caves and such. Either way, it took us that long to realize that we were so much, I guess, wealthier as a society if we engage people from the bottom up and let people make choices for themselves. I guess we could argue, Jason brought up that we give all this power to government. I'm not sure what we gave and what was just ripped right out of our hands, or I should say out of the hands of the Constitution. I'm hoping it's not just a win for Republicans. To win for Republicans, okay, it's a win against Democrats, so that's always great. As far as the actual issue that I hope people take away from this, what really sunk the Democrats in this for the most part, I think, is the school issue in Loudoun County and some of these other places and the idea that there were things like sexual assaults going on, that the school board was lying about, there was issues of essentially critical race theory or essentially race obsessive teaching, I guess, a focus in the teaching, that kind of stuff that was going on inside the classrooms, which was really making a lot of people uncomfortable. And I hope people don't walk away with this with the idea of, well, we just got to get Republicans in there to fix everything. I hope the real push is for school choice, because that's what you really want. Notice where they go for their salvation, white supremacy. You know, a while ago, George Bush, I'm talking about the second one, he said that there are standards that we are setting for black and brown children. I'm paraphrasing his words. We are seeing nothing but a soft bigotry of low expectations. We are now looking at our education system. We are totally dismantling it, and we're going to replace it with these equitable things that are going to take us to this educational utopia. But the thing that nobody could never answer, one and one equal to two in every language, every culture, every country. How could he then say there's any sort of bias, any sort of ethnic or racial bias in mathematics? Calculus is the same everywhere. I first learned calculus in a foreign country, foreign to this one, the land of my birth, through and through that. I have taught calculus and other forms of mathematics of people from nearly everywhere in the world. Mathematics is the same wherever you are. It's a universal language. Qualified immunity for police officers, at least, has been a disaster and has allowed all kinds of abuses. It just needs to stop, in my humble opinion. They need to protect themselves, however. The ones that do the best jobs out there and destroy rights the least and uphold rights the most will pay the least amount of malpractice insurance, just like physicians do. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness always and forever.