 So I've talked enough. Please, here's the long line that you brought up. Yeah, yeah, yeah, here are the best and the brightest. We'll all make a picture of them. Mention your name, and then the question is that finger that ends with a question mark, OK? Hello. My name is Bruno, Bruno Aguilar. First, thank you, Sir Díton, as well as the board of Erasmus, Nexus, and Dromendad. Sir Díton, your lecture, as well as your books, present a pessimist or rather realistic angle of our social economic structures. There is a problem with capitalism, but are there either individual solutions that we can as citizens put in practice or for the people that here are heading institutions? Do you see also institutional solutions to capitalism? Or can it be improved? Would it be discarded? Or is it too late? No, there's certainly not nothing to be done, right? Otherwise, we're all doomed. So there's something to be done. And it's always individuals in the end, though individuals work through institutions. And again, I think the solutions are probably different. Well, the broad solution of capitalism is coming to an end. We can fix it with a welfare state and reign in inequality, which happened after the Second World War. I don't think anyone knows what the new thing is going to look like. And I think for me in writing this lecture and thinking about it, the condescension by intellectuals to the people being left behind has, I think, been a terrible problem. And I think we have to listen more broadly. And I wish Rob wouldn't use the term the best and the brightest because the best and the brightest are the disaster when they come to run the world.