 So Michael asks, will life expectancy increase for the upper middle class and wealthy while the working class dies younger due to addiction and suicide? If you have no future and live in the middle of nowhere, what is the desire to live? Yeah, I mean I think that's a big pattern of what we're seeing. We're seeing people who are poorer but also who haven't established a purpose in life. I think it has more to do with values. I think people who tend to be middle class, upper middle class and wealthy, tend to have more purpose and tend to have a career and tend to have goals and tend to have much more mission in life and therefore have a lot more self-respect and self-esteem that drives the longer life expectancy. But it does look like there's a pattern in the United States where upper middle class and wealthy are living longer, quite a bit longer and working class and poor and you know whether that's in Mississippi or the Appalachee are living shorter lives and don't ever desire to live. But the way you frame the question Michael, you frame it as if they're passive about this. As I've always said, they can get in the car and they can drive to Northeast Arkansas with their jobs. They can enroll in a training program, they can switch jobs, they can do work, they can go run every morning and get into better shape, they can drop the alcohol habit, they can drop the drug habit. This is all, all of this is not determined. This is within the scope of people's free will. But the challenges that we live in a culture that tells them that they have no chance, it tells them that they shouldn't try, it tells them that they will be taken care of by the state, it tells them that whatever, whatever their health problems or however, obese they are, whatever, that's okay. Don't talk about shame-fatting or whatever it's called. And I think it's wrong to shame people for being fat and certainly without knowing what's causing them. But it's also not wrong to identify an ideal in terms of health and to encourage people to be healthy, to be healthy. But that suggests a standard, that suggests that health is a standard and people don't, certain people don't like that. But yeah, it is, there is a lot of, this has to do with self-esteem and this has to do with self-confidence and this has to do with the view of oneself and this has to do with values. And in a world that doesn't really value values and a world in which self-esteem is getting a ribbon, it's not real achievement. And in a world in which we don't believe people have free will and determined by the environment or determined by the genes. In a world in which we tell everybody don't worry the government will take care of you. Surprise, surprise, people don't have the self-esteem to take control of their own life. And one aspect of that, one manifestation for that is they die young. They die young. You know, it goes back to that great line from Shawshank Redemption, get busy living or get busy dying. And a big chunk of America is busy dying. And politically, look where they are. And that's that it tells you something about the modern Republican Party. It's a party that is dominated by people who are busy dying. Not, not good. I'll go to Patreon, subscribe star locals and just making a appropriate contribution on any one of those, any one of those channels. Also, if you'd like to see the Iran book show grow, please consider sharing our content. And of course, subscribe, press that little bell button right down there on YouTube so that you get an announcement when we go live. And for those of you who already subscribers and those of you who already supporters of the show, thank you. I very much appreciate it.