 Välkomna till en forestgivare. Jag har ganska många videor planerat, men det känns mer bra att... ...hålla på förhållande av coronavirorna för att... ...det är efterallt det mest relevanta att diskutera i tiden. Så första frågan jag tänkte att respondera är hur seriöst jag tar det här och... Jag tar det särskilt. Jag är inte doktor mig själv, men min vän är en doktor och jag tror att det är en man som är hundra procent professionell och om man vill det bästa för min familj. Han säger att vara säker, vara säker, hålla dig i isoleringen till det bästa av er. Så det är vad vi gör. Så om du är frågad om min personalstans, ja, jag försöker hålla det. Jag försöker hålla sig säker till det bästa av våra möjligheter. Och naturligtvis är vi fortnads att vara nere i den foresten av isoleringen här i goda, olja Skandinavier. Så du vet, klockan till naturen. Så det är mycket lätt för oss att vara... Jag kan tänka mig att om du är i Madrid, eller i någon av de italieniska städer det kan säkert vara mycket hårdare mentalt att bara vara på sidan, men vi kan åtminstone gå ut i den foresten. Och det är inte så mycket problem att vara helt tillräckligt. Ja, jag missar gym, jag missar MMA, men i alla fall... Ja, det är... Jag kan göra mycket, mycket lätt. Så det är alldeles bra. Men jag skulle säga något då, i relation till ekonomin. Och, du vet, jag vill inte känna som en konservativ, eller en nyliberal, som beror på GDP och inte beror på människor. My perspective is this. I do take it seriously, and I do endorse of course social distancing, quarantine measures, bands and travel and everything. I do support it because I believe this is a severe health crisis, and all countries should do their part to try to stop it, including Sweden. I say should because we aren't at the moment, but it comes at a cost. And that cost is economical. And I don't say that I'm worried about the economy for the sake of some giant corporation or some banks or anything. I am worried about the economy for the small family businesses, the small companies, etc. You know, everyone who has a company, you know it's not always the easiest. And you know everything is quite fragile. It's sometimes hard to get damn. Okay, you could probably not see that, but there was an elk in the forest. Actually just ran away. Okay, so a bit of extra material. Yeah, I don't know if you saw anything in the video, but yeah, I will take another path. I don't want to disturb the elk, well I already did, but yeah, anyway. So, where was I? Yes, I do am worried about the small businesses. It is hard to get around. And if you have a family driven cafe somewhere, and you have a city wide lockdown, it can be a, it can break your business. Whereas if you have big companies, big multinational companies such as McDonald's for example, they can withstand the sort of economic tragedies. You know, they might have to fire a few people. But at the end of the day, you know, if you're employed at McDonald's, you've perhaps worked there for half a year or something. You haven't invested so much time, money, energy into that. Whereas the family cafe might have. You know, yeah, it's been a lot going into that endeavor. What do you do if it goes bankrupt or being bought up by a large Starbucks or something? So you see, if I say that I am a bit worried about the economy, it's not because I care so much about the GDP, it's because I care about people. It's because I care about these, you know, little companies that make the economy go around. You know, the local economies. And if there's something, as I said in the last video, if there is one thing that hopefully is a lesson here, is the virtue and the value of a local economy. That, you know, you are not so dependent upon these big multinational companies. You're not so dependent on imports. You're not so dependent upon a system that is so fragile that a little thing can happen somewhere else and the whole chain comes crashing down. If you want to have a reliable and stable antifragile system, yeah, it's local farms basically. You get the majority of your food produce from local farms. Not rocket science, but something that should be the pinnacle of every economic system. You know, if any heads of states are watching this, you should definitely focus on that sort of thing when you formulate your policies. Now also, again, if any heads of states are watching this final video, in regards to using the tax money. You know, you have the option what you can spend the tax money on. You can either bail out a massive bank for an astronomical amount of money. You can spend the money on a population replacement. You know, giving all money away to young men from other bio-cultures. Or alternatively, what you can also do. And this is my completely revolutionary wisdom here. I know it's very radical, but you could actually, you could try to spend it on your own population, on your own entrepreneurs, on your own men and women in a tough spot because of the lockdowns. So you say to them, you know, the family café I just mentioned, the local farm, the whatever, everyone who is affected by the lockdown in a city. So if you are in Italy for example, you have a local family owned café of some sort. You say to them, okay, you need to stay inside. You need to close your shop for however much time. But we will give you a grant of this amount of euro or whatever so that you can, you know, you haven't lost all too much. Sure you have lost revenue, but we can compensate a bit of it so that you survive. So you see that is a reasonable use of the tax money. So instead of again bailing out a big bank or continuing on with population replacement or giving away all the tax money to development countries. Revolutionary thought, focus on your own population. So anyway, I just wanted to have that said. Long story short, I take this pandemic situation seriously. I suggest everyone else does too. But I am also worried about the economy, but there is a solution. I do suggest, you know, lockdowns, social isolation, social distancing is a good idea. And most western nations have enough resources to compensate the smaller businesses that make the economy go around. And I do feel my heart goes out to all of these businesses being targeted. You know, my businesses are, you know, quite antifragile in this regard. Now of course I have calculated it will be less revenue. It is what it is. It sucks. It's not fun at all, but ultimately priorities for me and my family to stay safe and everyone else staying safe as well. So yeah, that being said, I hope you all stay safe and thank you for watching XXO.