 Vryazin. People generally operate in their own self-interest. Self-interest can often come into conflict with other people's self-interest. This often times results in the evil we see in the world around us. Compassion is important. Pandemic watch states, I agree. And operate in their own self-interest. Generally, people generally. Yeah, sure. Generally, you can act in self-interest. That's fine. You need to go, you know, let's say in the olden days, you need to kill an animal to eat it. Sure, you're killing an animal to eat it. But it doesn't mean you mean any ill-will to the animal that you killed, right? It's self-preservation. However, it's not the general everyday life that decides who you're going to be to a certain degree. Sure, your everyday actions will change the world. But it's those moments when the decision is supposed to be made, right? Those are the moments, those important moments that we're talking about here, where you work, where you do something out of self-interest. You do what is best for the other, right? For example, if you see a car coming down the road, you could be self-interest. Someone, you have ice cream, someone else finished their ice cream and they say, oh, they would like to have a lick of your ice cream. You say, no, I don't want to give you a lick of my ice cream. That's self-interest. But if you're walking down the road and you see a kid on the road and a car coming down really fast, I'm pretty sure most people would drop the ice cream and go grab that kid off the road and bring him over, right? So you're no longer operating your own self-interest. You're operating an interest of the other person, right? So it's not your daily minute-by-minute self-interest things that you do that matter. It's those important moments where you say, my self-preservation or my interest does not supersede the other person. I will do this for someone else, right?