 This is the border, this is Zambia, and then this is another country, a neighboring country. In the Zambian economy, we have corporations, primarily the foreign owned, then we have the state here, and then we have the unlocked potential of the country, then we have the labor force, these two glasses are representing the labor force. One is the labor force that is working, that one is an employed labor. So here is what has been happening in Zambia. This cooperation makes money. At the end of the month, that money is paid to the Zambian workers. As I said, this cup or this glass is representing all the Zambian workers. So the salary is 1,000 kwaht, as it is in the 10-1 place. It's full, as you can see it's 1,000 kwaht. But remember, almost 50% is taxation. Apart from pay as you earn, remember the workers' contributions, the snapshots, all those kinds of contributions. When you put them together, they are quite huge. Another thing of the day, they are going to the same cup. When I'm saying cup, I'm talking about the taxation, you know, cup, the treasury. That is taxation, this glass representing taxation. So 50% is deducted. And mind you, these deductions are done at the source. These companies have an obligation to deduct at the source. So the Zambian worker just sees the amount of money on the pistol. The rest goes into the treasury. This cooperation too, from the money that it has, more than 50% is paid in corporate taxes. Among many other taxes that are imposed on corporations. So at the end of the day, this cup which was empty, the treasury cup as resources. And this money goes to the government, the central government. That's what happens. Now, from the funds that are here, representing the profits, this cooperation is foreign. So it will take those profits to where it came from. So it's this outside economy which is growing. And as this outside economy grows, it means that more jobs are going to be created here. Because more industries must produce what this cooperation needs to sell. Now mind you, this man has gone to the government. The government goes to the same cooperation to buy services, goods and services. Or it hires the same services. At the end of the day, money goes back to the same cooperation. And this man is also representing money paid to the politicians. But they need to go to the same foreign corporations to go and get the services or to buy what they are selling. The Zambian worker goes to pay, also goes to buy from the same corporations. While the employers at the same time or whether it's in the civil service, they go to buy from the same. So money is going back. And part of what the Zambian worker is able to dispose of is given to the labor which is not employed. We are talking about independence. These dependents do not learn their own corporations. They go to the same ones to buy. So everyone is back to the same position. But the total, the sum total of the money in the economy is reduced. The resources, the resources of the group is reduced because part of it went outside. I don't know if you understand this. Again, the same will continue. My Zambian worker is taxed at source. So that 100% I was seeing at face shows just for demonstration. So I think the Zambian worker continues to get less. That is below 50%. The same thing happens. The Zambian worker goes to buy. The Zambian worker gives the dependents. The dependent goes to buy there. And then this goes to the central government. The central government goes to these ones. Remember part of the process that they made, they have gone outside. So the economy outside is growing, ours is not growing. So as you can see, this resource envelope is declining. So as this declines, the stupid government goes to borrow from these same ones from outside. They borrow the money from outside. And then they come. So this is borrowed money. They pour it in the same ones, the same corporations. So at the end of the day, there's no new money which is coming to the economy. And this is what has killed Zambian. So under EPP policy, we propose that pay as you end must be scrapped off. Now look at what will happen when it's scrapped off pay as you end. When the Zambian worker gets the money, all this money is not going anywhere. The only little she's deducted is for social security, not dispensions. The rest is your money. So it means that we have built your capital base. You get this money, you invest in the local people. This is, man, you still have control over this. So you have given resources to that Zambian who is not in employment. Or you create your own store. You invest in your own store. When you invest in your own store, you are creating customers. You are creating employment for these ones who are not in employment. At the same time, you are unlocking the locked up potential of the country. So you will make resources and then you will tap into the untapped resources. You will have the funds. These ones, they will come to buy from you because you are selling goods and services. From our nations, money will begin to pour into the local economy. And everybody is going to be working. That's how you get the country to work. And the state which did not collect taxation from the Zambian worker, which don't return the pay as you earn, will instead introduce under the UPP policy a profit-based kind of taxation. So from the profits that you make, from here, if you make, let's say up to that much, the state will only share in the profits, not from personal incomes, but from your business. That's what goes to the state for services. Corporations to foreign, when they come to invest in our country, remember, they must go into partnerships under the UPP policy. 50% partnerships with the people of Zambia. So 50% of the resources, half of what they're bringing in, or half of what is generated, you can be rest assured that that is going to be retained in the economy. And the state to share in those profits, profit-based kind of taxation on the corporations. So at the end of the day, we have resources. And these resources are returned in the local economy to grow jobs, to attack the potential, because the state too can run its own profit-making ventures jointly with the people of Zambia. We have our gold, we have emeralds, we have all these resources. We have Mukula. We can have state-run enterprises in partnerships with the people of Zambia, or we can have public corporations. What are public corporations? These are corporations in which the state has an interest in the party, or generally the people of Zambia have an interest and more than 50% shareholding is local. So this is what we've been talking about. Now as long as we are taxing the people of Zambia, as long as we have a kind of recycled political leadership across the divide, both ruling and opposition, this country will perpetually be condemned to more debt, like what is happening now. Any political leader, ruling more opposition, who proposes that we must go to die-move, we must go to borrow from other countries is a stupid leader, and this is the trash that we have in our politics. And all these idiots that we have must be retired from the Zambian politics.