 I want to get into a little bit of who Ayn Rand was, what these philosophies were, the kind of movement that she started that obviously you and other people are kind of carrying on. And then I want to get into this playbook that you're saying that she left behind. And so maybe there's some practical steps that people can learn that maybe they can get from this interview that they can kind of have some steps they can get into. Before we do that though, I think I always think about this quote from Henry Ford. He gave us quite a few good amount of quotes. And he says that thinking is such hard work. That's why so few people do it. And so I think about that. And so I'll give you that quote, but then I want to ask you the question, which is you're basically making the statement that people don't take the time to think and have this deliberate life. So why? Why don't they? Well, a lot of reasons. One is it certainly requires effort. I'm going to disagree a little with Henry Ford only because if it's presented as hard work, you know, people resist hard work, right? It requires effort. It requires engagement. It requires focus. It requires a commitment to doing it, right? And by the way, I think this is, you talk about tools for living a good life. This is the most important commitment you'll make your entire life. Commit to focusing your mind, commit to thinking. If you commit to thinking, everything else will fall into place, right? You have to learn how to think. You have to learn how to think effectively. You have to introspect and learn what your values are and whether they're appropriate values or not. But the beginning, the starting point for everything is think, think, think, right? And why people don't do it because it takes effort and because they're not taught to. So if you go into an ethics class at a university, right, advanced ethics, personal ethics, whatever, what are they teaching? Oh, you should sacrifice to this. You should do this for the community. You should... Nobody ever says to you, okay, let's come up with some principles on how to live a good life and what those principles look like. And by the way, the first principle is think, focus your mind. Use your free will that you have. You're never taught anything. You're not taught to think critically, to think in a challenging way. You're never taught logic, right? Logic is like arithmetic. You never even talked logic and we should all know logic because that's how you think. That's what rational thinking means. So you're not taught to take care of yourself. Maybe we're taught to eat good food, maybe we're even taught how to exercise, but we're never taught proper mental hygiene, if you will, mental practice, exercise, how to improve that muscle and that's the most important thing we have is our brain. And yet we're not really taught how to use it and that it applies to everything in our life, not just to business, not just to getting good grades at school, but to every part of our life is going to depend on the quality of the thinking we do. Thank you for listening or watching The Iran Book Show. If you'd like to support the show, we make it as easy as possible for you to trade with me. You get value from listening. You get value from watching. Show your appreciation. You can do that by going to iranbookshow.com slash support by going to Patreon, subscribe star locals and just making a appropriate contribution on any one of those, any one of those channels. So 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 are already subscribers and those of you who are already supporters of the show, thank you. I very much appreciate it.