 Good morning, John. So it's a little shocking to me and like a lot of other people that a 14-year-old kid in a NASA shirt brought a clock that he built to school to show his engineering teacher and was arrested and taken to a juvenile detention center. But then on the other hand, it's not shocking because Ahmed Muhammad's name is Ahmed Muhammad and he is Muslim. And many people in America are afraid of Muslims. Now, I'm not going to make a video here about how the vast, vast, vast majority of Muslims, just like any other broad diverse group of people, are good people. Two reasons for that. First, finding statistics on the internet that make this very clear is pretty easy. Second, making a video defending Muslims would ignore the actual problem, which is the bias and the fear-mongering that creates suspicion and hatred. And those things are our problems. And our problems, we can deal with so much more easily than trying to deal with other people's problems, especially when those problems are imagined. Now, of course, it's not super comfortable to recognize your own problems, and it doesn't make you feel all good, which is why this video is not going to go super viral. But since it is the actual problem, and also one that we can deal with conceivably, since we are the ones with the problem, that's what I want to make the video about. So, why do so many Americans, including, I'll be honest, sometimes myself, fall into this fear trap? First, because it's just impossible to know everything about everyone, and though Muslims have been in America since America existed, they are a significant minority, less than 1%. So most Americans simply don't know much about Muslims or the Islamic faith. But we do hear about Muslims fairly regularly on the news, and we hear about the scariest Muslims in the world. So if you're expected to have an idea of what Muslim people are like, and this is the only input you're getting, you're gonna have a really messed up idea. It's an easy mistake for a brain to make, but it is a huge mistake, because we know nothing. An example, what percentage of Muslims would you say live in the Middle East? 80%, 85%? That's what I would have said before starting to research this video. How about 20%? 60% of Muslims live in Asia. The single country with the largest Muslim population? Indonesia. If we are ignorant of such a basic fact, how could we consider ourselves qualified to make sweeping generalizations about a broad and diverse group of people? Once these negative ideas are set up in our brain, they can be easily reinforced in people who are motivated by fear and outrage. Those people watch other people on TV who professionally cultivate outrage and fear, because it's good for ratings. And that fear then prevents conversations and causes the majority to isolate Muslims from their broader communities by doing things like, for example, arresting a kid for bringing a clocked class. So the fear builds on itself until what was once ignorance and became fear eventually becomes hatred. And once you hate someone, they know it. Muslims in America are certainly not ignorant of the hatred and the discrimination. But Muslims in other countries aren't ignorant of the more extreme American views either. In fact, I'm willing to bet that in the same way that we hear mostly just about scary Muslims on American news, in other countries they hear mostly about the scariest versions of Americans. And if people in other countries are going to put us in a little box, which they are bound to do because no one can know everything about everyone, what little box do we want to get put into? Do we want to be in the hates Muslims box? Or do we want to be in the values, religious freedom, and provides opportunities for people who seek it box? I think we should fight that fear. I think we can fight that fear. And the only way to do it, the only place to do it is up here. It's right in here. John, I'll see you on Tuesday.