 Did you go up on a kibbutz in Israel? Did I go up on a kibbutz in Israel? I did not. Now, do you know what a kibbutz is? Anybody know what a kibbutz is? So kibbutz used to be a farming community in which it's as close to communism as you can come. Everything is communally owned, everything. So nobody has a job, one job. They rotate the jobs. So you spend two months in the field, two months in the factory if there's a factory, two months in the kitchen, and there's no individual kitchens. None of the apartments have kitchens. There's a communal kitchen. Everybody eats together. So you spend in the kitchen, and you might spend it washing dishes. So you do every job in rotation. There's no expertise. There's no division of labor. There's continuous, you don't even raise your own kids. So when you have kids, they're taken to the nursery and they're raised with everybody's kids, and you do a turn in the nursery as part of the work that you do. Now, these are about as close to communism as you can come, about as close to socialism as you can come without government imposition and authoritarianism. They were experiments that were tried in Israel. The founders of Israel were very socialist, many of them communists. And they survived about, I don't know, some of them survived about 70, 80 years. But this is the secret. Nobody tells that they've always been subsidized. They were never economically viable entities. They were always subsidized. Originally, they were subsidized by rich Jews overseas who used to send them checks. When the state of Israel was founded, they were subsidized by the government. And as soon as those subsidies were reduced, like in the last 20, 30 years, they keep a team of completely changed the model. Today, they don't resemble those old socialized things at all. They were completely broken up. And the other thing people don't talk about is the fact that everybody hated each other. It was the worst kind of community I've ever experienced. While I didn't live on a keyboard, I worked on a keyboard. And people backstabbed and gossiped and hated each other and think, why would this happen? Well, let's say I work hard. And I really am diligent in my job. And somebody else is just lazy. And I get exactly the same as the lazy person. I get exactly the same duties, exactly the same jobs, exactly the same income. If somebody wanted to buy a television, they couldn't buy a television because they had no money, because the money was shared. And if you wanted a television, everybody had to have a television. So while somebody people worked hard and other people were lazy, everybody, you start resenting. You start hating people. Because how come I'm doing all the work and he's doing nothing and everybody's benefiting the same? Nothing is, there's no more sicker, a social environment. It's then a socialist or communist type environment where everybody resents and everybody's envious constantly. So Kibbutz is a great social experiment that failed. Yeah.