 Every single one of the systems that we rely on today, our transportation system, our infrastructure, our agricultural systems, our governance systems, our political and social systems, every single thing that impacts our lives today was built on colonial violence and the values of domination. So we seek to flip that and to put our values of reciprocity, of honoring one another in the land, that every single person, whether you're indigenous or not, somehow is capable of feeling in their heart as their true original culture. Make that the basis of how our systems are designed today. For me, innovation is changing how things happen, how the world works, and when an innovator creates something or does something, it changes how people engage in the real world or how we engage with the environment, how we use technology. Innovation should have a heart, instead of just thinking about creating impact. We have to think about what really drives us to do it and what values are behind our desires to make the world change. An entrepreneurial competition in agriculture, water and energy in these times is absolutely brilliant and so honored to be here in support of that, particularly with this emphasis on sustainability, regenerative design, and really providing for our grandchildren and our great grandchildren with our entrepreneurship and with our economic pursuits. And we need to be investing radically into people who are creating businesses that support life, that support what we need to live and thrive. We have so much capacity to dream into the earth. We have so much capacity to create businesses that support life, that support our families and that are not simultaneously sacrificing our health and the health of our lives. Be a part of what you are doing and to encourage people who are usually thinking, well, I don't want to get into deciding a business idea because I'm not the kind of person who's interested in that. I wanted to give this idea that, well, somebody else will do it, so we want good people to do it. And good people are the ones who don't want to get into this dirty, you know, world of business and competition and that is exactly why we want them to be part of this. Here at the Humboldt, I've seen people with the desire to do things that will benefit others and this desire for social justice can permeate in innovation, in business design, in technology and that is something that I have seen in the work that I've seen in El Salvador, in other parts of Latin America, some friends I mentioned, some of the ideas and some of the work that they've come to do. So I see a lot of that and I see a lot of potential in the students that came and other people who came to hear the talk and I would love to see them come and do something really awesome.