 I can hear the objections, particularly when this shows up on YouTube. If you look down in the comments, I'm going to see guys that are saying, I can't raise my standards around women, because that's really the whole point I'm suggesting here is that we can all, almost all of us, afford to raise our standards a little bit in what we expect from relationships and what we're willing to give and what we expect of ourselves. And there are going to be men who hear this and they're going to say, I can't raise my expectations because women have become hopelessly corrupted by feminism or by only fans or by Tinder or whatever it is. The social fabric is hopelessly destroyed between men and women. And my response to that objection is, you sound kind of hopeless. Good. Because hopelessness is not necessarily a bad place to be as long as it doesn't lead to being immobilized and nihilistic. But if you're merely hopeless that things can't improve, they have nothing to lose by trying something different, trying some new behaviors and seeing if some new possibilities present themselves when you decide to give yourself a different experience. And so if your belief is that the social fabric is hopelessly destroyed, well, no individual man can fix that. But what if some critical mass and some sufficient number of men decide, I'm going to look beyond the messages of shame. I'm going to raise my expectations. I'm not going to approach relationships from this subservient, obedient mentality that people like Susanna Walters want. I'm going to take up some space in the world and I'm going to become a relationship expert and I'm going to build good relationships and carry good people along with me. If enough people decide to correct their little portion of the social fabric and mend it, then I don't know. I don't know what happens from there. Maybe the social fabric changes.