 Huh, that's great. So I'm calling you through an app called Recall Recorder. It lets me call numbers. And it records the phone call itself remotely. It's pretty cool. It's like a quick and dirty Skype on a phone, but it's a podline connection. Oh, that's nice, but, you know, it didn't say, oh, you know, I think when it rang, though, it said a different number than yours, right? Probably because I have to call them and I hand off your number and then they call you from the number I hand it off to them, so you see it coming from them, not from me. Something like that. And it's an announcement that is being recorded, which is, I guess, like really like a compliance thing, like you can't, right? Yeah. There's a setting. I think that may be so often. If you want, you can turn it off. Yeah. I mean, isn't it just so funny, this one little law passed, whatever, you know, 50 years ago or something, you know, we're still governing software development? Or, you know, you know, anybody could, I mean, it's really certainly that development, isn't it? Yeah. What's the big deal if you're recording a call and what's the frenzy over that, you know? I don't know why Skype doesn't allow this, but this company can do it. But anyway, you and I were talking about our Monday morning ghetto language exploration hour. And the difference between walk-to-walk and talk-to-talk. Yeah. And money talk and bullshit walks. Money talk and bullshit walks is one. Talk-to-talk and walk-to-walk. Right. How are they related? Well, yeah, it was complicated, really. But if you understand that walking and talking are sort of, I don't know how you'd say, just contiguous and each separate, the same, then you come closer to arriving at the meaning of each. So talking-to-talk and walking-to-walk. So the walking-to-walk is great. Talking-to-talk is sort of just getting going. It's sort of bad. It's what you don't want to just do. But in the case of money talk, okay, that's what you want to be doing. You want to be talking because bullshit, which is not talking or it's not money, really. But wait, in that case, yeah, the walking would be, well, now I got it completely confused. Maybe you can explain it. Well, you got to get, let's get back to walk-to-walk and talk-to-talk. In a way, I see a Catholic Protestant paradigm here because the Catholics walk-to-walk and the Protesters talk-to-talk. Faith by words. Faith by words, faith by deeds, right? So Catholics think that your work shall stay deep. That's walking-to-walk. And the Protesters think talking-to-talk is what matters. You have to get down to your knees and say some magical spell. You're Jesus' Lord, I accept you into my heart. And then you're good forever. And you say that's talking-to-talk or walking-to-walk? Yeah, that's talking-to-talk. So they're just talking because I was just thinking that getting down on your knees is a kind of a walk. I mean, that's sort of walking-to-walk. But you're saying you have to live a good life. Yeah, that's a walking-to-walk. That's the Catholic idea of doing good works. Okay. Earning your way. But I don't think you have to express your means walk-to-walk and talk-to-talk. And I'm trying to figure out what the connection is between money-talks and bullshit walls. I know that's the guy that you introduced. I think money-talk means if you got money, if you're offering money to me, it talks to me. I'm listening to it and I'm open to it. I know. And thereby causes you to walk. I mean causes like action. No, no. Money talks and bullshit walks. The money doesn't cause you to walk. Right. The point is your money causes your wishes to be instantiated into your living reality. The money talks to you. It has meaning to you and so the deal can proceed. But bullshit walks means get out of here. You're not willing to pony up the real money. Get out of here with your bullshit. I don't want to hear you. Okay. But in that case, I think the walking is being done by the hearer of the word of the bullshit. You know, not the bullshit himself. Because if you're bullshitting me, I'm just going to walk away. It's not that I'm going to tell you, stop bullshitting me. Go walk. But don't walk the walk. Right. But bullshit walks, whatever you do. Don't walk the walk. Just half walk. Just do the first walk. Don't do the full walk. That is just what you just told me. It's such bullshit. It strikes me that it's more like talks than walk. So I'm going to have to ask you to walk away, but not in a full sort of walk. That would imply that you're walking the walk. I think we have to do full urban dictionary for the defensive answer and all these things. You have to do a silly walk. It strikes me that bulls, and I think there must be a different... I mean, these might be two different languages in effect. I mean, I have a... I detect in this money talks bullshit walks a little bit of a sort of occasion, you know, Louisiana thing to it, you know? I mean, it's a little bit of a rural feel to it, you know? Let's go with urban dictionary. It says money talks bullshit walks. It means that sheep talk will get you nowhere while money will persuade people to do as you like. Okay, I like that. Okay, but what does that mean in the context of bullshit walks? I mean, it means that the person being bullshited walks away. Yeah. They have to walk away because they're not going to make any progress. Money persuades people to do what you want them to do. Bullshit causes them a level of incredulity that prompts them to choose some other communicative partner. Yeah, I think it does tie in discourse aspects to one way or the other. Wait, I think I got to confuse this. Because it just causes them to walk away. He's like, why should I stand here listening to your bullshit? Okay, walk the walk, you know? Hold on, in urban dictionary, walking the walk means show others about something by your own footsteps, your own example of the way to do it. You yourself are walking the way for them to follow by your own life. For example, she told them at the meeting, you need to walk the walk. Your ear cells for them to understand by your own example is how they will learn what it means to be a Christian. I told you it always turns back to Christianity. That's walking the walk. Let's see what talk would talk about. I think that these are actually the same in that case, because you think about it, when you hear bullshit, you should walk the walk. You shouldn't just talk and say, hey, that's bullshit. You have to walk the walk, which is like you have to walk away from the bullshit. That'd be a good name for these Japanese shoes and places, walk the walk. You know what I mean? Initially I thought that these were completely different usages of walk and talk, but now I'm realizing that they might actually be the same, you know? Well, let's see here. Talk to talk is defined as to talk honestly about something yourself. Someone that talks to talk talks with integrity, honesty, loyalty, and love. Walking the church, Sheila said to Britta, talk to talk yourself. You can't say that about her and then turn around and say the opposite. Talk to talk. What? You've got to talk to talk. Yeah, but I thought talk to talk meant that, you know, yeah, you were saying anything of any relevance or meaning until you could back it by certain actions. It means be consistent with your message, brother. You tell the sisters, you're talking to talk to the sisters. You see, it actually means no backbiting. You've got to talk to talk. I was confused, fairly confused because I thought that talk to talk... I think you talk to talk when you write. You talk to talk. Yeah. Yeah. I just... I was a little confused, because because, you know, I would talk to talk and the talk was like, you know, so irrelevant to even be slightly regrettable, but now you're telling me it's kind of a moral injunction. You know what's interesting? You know how much it costs to use urban dictionary on my phone? You use it on your phone? Yeah. Do you know how much it costs to use urban dictionary on a phone? How much? Nothing. And have you ever heard the expression, you get what you pay for? Yeah. Well, you know, every time I hear you get what you pay for, I always think money talks, most of the time. You ever hear someone say, all he cares about is money? Something like that. He's so greedy, all he cares about is money? Yeah. Which means you have some guy that keeps accumulating money somehow, but he's never in his life spent the dollar on anything ever. Oh, yeah. Well, I don't know if you can... I don't know. I think you probably spend and still care about money. I mean, I think the expression doesn't mean that he keeps all the money. It just means that he keeps wanting to get more. No, they say all he cares about is money. Also, you would care about money more than you would care about it. Or more than you would care about it. No. If you buy a chocolate bar, you care more about the chocolate bar. They're the money you spend for it. So everyone... No one cares about money only. That is it. Well, they wouldn't spend it. That's a really great criticism of a common... Actually, you can really annoy the hell out of people by just correcting them when they say that. Yeah, I know. Oh, really? He's never had a meal. This is the libertarian way to live, you know. So he says, oh, all you care about is money. He's like, actually, that's not really possible. Let me explain to you why I'm going to be very fantastic right now. That's the sort of libertarian way of going through life. Trying to part people's phrases. All right, I'm going to wash the walls now. You going to go talk to talk? Yeah, I'm going to talk to... Hey, listen, I've got the best idea for an article. I'm going to beg it out today, and I don't think... I don't think this is commonly known. So I kind of want to write it up, although I'm a little bleary-headed at this point. I'm not so sure. But I want to document... That's actually been documented so many times. I want to explain and put into actual prose. This very interesting empirical observation, which is really obvious once you hear it, that welfare states tend to be unsustainable in demographic heterogeneous communities and stable and growing in homogenous communities. Okay. So that's really interesting, isn't it? I think it's potentially interesting. Yeah, I mean, it's a fascinating sort of empirical matter, right? But as I'm talking about, I said, you know, this is why. Do you remember, like, why the left is always sort of actually thinking about our family, you know, the nation of the family, the community, you know? Like, what was really Clinton's book? You know, something... What was it called? It Takes a Village? Yeah. Yeah, we're like... We all raise each other in some way, you know? And the reason they do that is they want it to feel kind of like a tight connection to all of our cultures. I mean, there's an essential collectivism. It's very similar to the way Trump thinks of the nation, right? There's this kind of weird collectivism about it. The thing is that you have to kind of impart this sense of mutual duty and stuff. If you're going to get people to do things like go to war, pay high taxes before the welfare state and so on, you've got to have a kind of a sense of identity with your fellow Senate citizens. But when that begins to break down, these institutions become unsustainable. You know, war, welfare state, and all the rest of it. And the biggest place for them to begin to break down is for you to look at your fellow citizens ago. Fuck. You've got something like me, you know, different language, different race, different act, you know, different class, you know. So the more heterogeneous the population is, the less sustainable collective action it is. Why are you not just amazed by this? I'm walking the walk. I'm talking it. I just gave a beautiful presentation of, boils down to like 50 years of a very impure, how old are you? It helps you see the world in a completely fresh and new way and you said nothing. I'm thinking it's a process. It's a fascinating point, isn't it? I think it has potential fascination ability. No, I'm pretty sure that there are five implications. I'm sure there are five implications. All right. I want to stop this recording and send it to you and then we can post it. Are you recording still? Yeah. Yeah, but there are five implications, not four or not six. Yeah, I know. It's exactly five. None of them are redundant. You're sure you've exhausted all the categories. Have you ever heard of Prager University? Yeah. I don't know much about it. Well, I just found out about it last night. It's actually fascinating. It's kind of a right, kind of a, I'm not sure how to describe it, but it's definitely right wing, but it's not like, it's kind of Yankee right wing. In another way. It's like, I'm not sure what it's called, Neopop right wing, but they have all these things like the Civil War wasn't back in favor, you know? And, but then they have the thing that's like, but it's pro-free, pro-free and private, so ultimately you get a lot of things, stuff like that. But it's not vegetarian really. It's more conservative. It's like conservatarian, but a little bit imperialist. So they have a complete video of why bombing Hiroshima was the greatest thing ever. Stuff like that. It's a little bit nationalist. It's like nationalist conservatarianism. Yeah. It's pretty interesting. I mean, I don't know what to tell you, but actually what's actually amazing about it is, oh, I guess there's a guy named Dennis Prager. Okay. And he's like a fox guy or something. Okay. He's a best-selling author. Okay. So he's like some kind of star. He's like a, yeah, yeah, he's like a, he's like a big conservative star or something. But I'm telling you, this thing, the site is brilliant because the videos are getting like a million views or two million views. This is incredible. I mean, at a time when everybody's struggling to get attention, the whole thing is like five-minute videos. And it's really rocked it. It's been amazing. Well, I see here Larry Edelder, Alex Epstein, Brett Stevens, and Dennis Prager. Oh, wow. And to get into their summit is $1,000. This whole thing is really expensive. All right. You should look at it. I'm trying to follow who's up and down in sort of a website media world. And I'm actually going away at what kind of progress these people have made. And it's such a short, five years basically. Let's see what they're doing on Alexa, actually. Hey, did you read my essay on stress out? Oh, about how people get a job? Yeah, millennials? Yeah. I agree with you. I like it. Oh, OK. Yeah, I like to get a job. Yeah, you don't feel a lot of sympathy for these videos, right? What? You don't feel a lot of sympathy for millennials in their struggle. No, I do. It's not true. I don't think it's their fault they're millennials. It's not their fault that they're millennials. Yeah. They're born into this situation. And a lot of them are great. They're dealing with the opportunities at hand, man. Yeah, yeah. The opportunities at hand suck. So they're dealing with that. Right. Yeah, I do feel sympathy for them. Sure. So I like the piece. I agree with you, of course. Do you like it? Yeah, aren't some money. Have some self-esteem. Have some purpose. Learn practical skills. Yeah, but they really hate it. I mean, they really hate the commercial market. I think it's just because they're not a culture. They don't even know what the fuck it is. Yeah, and that could be it. I mean, really, it's just so confusing. They just don't even understand what it is. They don't understand what it is. What it means to bring value, you know? And they sort of... I mean, the problem is that, you know, they start shouting bullshit, and then they cause everybody to walk. And then they don't get money that allows them to talk. So they can't walk to walk or talk to talk. They can't money to talk. They can't even get enough money to talk. Money to talk. Yeah. Time flies when time has money. The money flies. You know, I have a sense that you've thought about a lot of these things on stones and knights. Remember that? That wasn't me, dude. Not a stone on the ground here. Times are different. Oh, really? For engineers, yeah. For these engineers. Yeah. See, in times of... I mean, who's at times looking for a pot source? Jesus. Yeah, I got my regular guy named Joe down the street. He's a good source for me. He's a fucking loser. Wow. He's trying to get you going. Good job. A thousand people at... a thousand people at the European Student Liberty Conference. A thousand. Oh, you know what you should have done? Instead of this, we should have done a YouTube live video. I know you're one person. What's the difference in YouTube live and Google Hangout? YouTube live comes from a verified channel. I can't believe you told me. That's what I told you? Yeah. It comes from a verified channel. It's only you on your iPhone. I didn't know you could do a YouTube live from your iPhone. Dude. Yeah. I didn't know that. You did have a couple already. I've never done one. Yes, you have. And I've done Facebook live. I think you're confused. You've done YouTube live. I've never done YouTube live. I've only done Google Hangout and Facebook live. Oh, maybe you're right. Facebook live. Is that when you get the verified thing on Facebook? Yeah. I was sitting here thinking, is he confusing YouTube and Facebook? Yeah. I'm confusing because I had YouTube red. But I thought YouTube red let you do that, too. Yeah. I think you're just, I mean, this is a typical example of what happens when you start talking about software. I find myself having to check out your claim. That's when you get off the phone. You have a mug and a lock. So the hot tub of my apartment unit is going great. You put some lavender in it? Some lavender. Is that what you put on hot tub? Oh, yeah. Bath salt, sea salt, lavender. You gotta pamper yourself, man. I didn't know about that part, but I don't think you can really do that because I live in an apartment complex. If I took lavender into the unit hot tub, I think people would want to kill me. Oh, the unit hot tub. You can just put a dollop on it. Yeah, I can. Can you imagine me showing up in my unit hot tub with bath salt and lavender? Don't tell them. Just act like someone else did it before you. What's that in your hand, buddy? Lavender man. No, you put the package on the side, but you got a big piece of tape on it saying Big Jim. And you say, let's hear what I got here. I don't know, guys. There's some Big Jim here. Oh, Big Jim and his lavender bath salt? Yeah. You're going to mess with Big Jim. I promise you, if it was a guy who put lavender in the hot tub, and anybody in my apartment unit had a guess who did that, I'd just pop on the wall. Well, I guess I could have a trial. You could get your own attorney to represent you. All right, let me read to you. I'll send you this recording. We'll post it later. All right, sir.