 My name is Alana Newhouse and I'm the Editor-in-Chief of Tablet. This is a talk for the Network State Conference. Tablet is a Jewish magazine about the world. Brokenism is a theory that what really divides us now is not left or right in the U.S. Democrat or Republican, liberal or conservative, but actually our relationship to and feelings about the health of our institutions. I think a parallel media is being made right now. The concept of brokenism is that the fundamental debate we're having is around the health of our current institutions. And on the one side, there are people who I call status quoists. These are people who are trying to protect and preserve our current institutions, many of whom are some of my closest friends. I absolutely understand these impulses. On the other side are people who I call brokenists. And these are people who not only do they believe that many of the institutions in society have become so decayed and so not only irrelevant but actively undermining of people's lives that they have become dangerous. And that it is dangerous to continue to portray them as healthy to people because we are not allowing people to prepare for a different future. So brokenists, at least the ones that I know, love to think of like literally physical place metaphors. So the metaphor that they use is this building is really decrepit. And you are telling your kids that they should be inside it and they should live there. And that building is going to fall down on them. You are literally putting them in danger by not only fixing those institutions but legitimating them for people, including some of the people that are closest to you. I might say that a perfect world is one in which people have IRL politics, internet principles and religious values build something that someone needs. Whether it ends up working or not, you will learn something and it will make you build something really great next. Thank you so much. Thank you.