6 Burst results for "Eric Kaufman"

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
"eric kaufman" Discussed on America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
"That's a wrap on Facebook. Oh my gosh, hi. I missed you. You know I have a flair for the dramatics. But it's so good, right? I'm so happy. And it's still me. It's just a little bit softer of a version. And I just hope that all trans and non binary people can get the gender Irving resources that they need because this is life-changing. And sometimes lifesaving. So thank you so much for supporting me. And we've got so much to catch up on. I love ya. That's a man. God Dylan Mulvaney, he was a failed actor, decided that he's a girl. And then gets to interview the president of the United States, and that was his recent plastic surgery reveal, still a man. Here's my biggest concern for you, doctor turley. I look at the recent polls on relations between the young genders between young men and young women. The lack of and I'm not encouraging sexual promiscuity. But the fear and the inadequacy and the artificiality that the me too culture and everything else is generated. There is a breakdown of the man and woman relationship. On top of that, COVID masking of children is going to create disastrous results in ten, 20 years time. And then we have the trans phenomena, which is, as far as I'm concerned, the apotheosis or the Nate deer of evil. Can we win can the good guys win? If there is such an assault on the youngest in our civilization and such a fear of what should be natural relations between men and women. Yeah, let me first absolutely corroborate what you're saying. You know, if you go back to, say, 1970, and you look at the Marxist feminist writers. They were all writing about the imperative of destroying the biological family, precisely because they believed and they were right. They believed it trained children have loyalties and fidelity that superseded modern ideologies like cultural Marxism. They recognized that the biological family was rooted in heterosexual norms. So if you forget eliminating heterosexuality, if you eliminate the sex difference itself, you can in turn break the biological family. That's their argument. So the end goal of what we just saw this gender transgender ideology is not equality or equity or civil rights or whatever you want to call it. The end goal of it all is to overturn the very foundations of civilization, namely the traditional family. So I think you're absolutely right. Yeah, again, the good news in this is demographics is destiny. And they're not replacing themselves. People who are moving in this direction. And I know there's some good some kids from good conservative families that are falling victim to this stuff. I know. And that's incredibly painful. I've been a teacher in classical Christian circles for years. So I'll see it here or there. But fortunately, we have the stats that have been coming in on that. And our kids, if they're being raised and conservative homes and particularly conservative religious conservative Christian homes, they're retaining their faith upwards about 70 to 80% into adulthood. The Amish have been, yeah, it's really neat. The Amish have been studied on this Eric Kaufman of the University of London across the pond, of course, and the UK system that those 7 I have benefited from, but Eric Kaufman has documented how Amish the rate of retention among because they go through it. They actually get to choose whether or not they can get to test the wide, wide world, and then make a decision. Yeah, yeah, and so about 30 years ago, it was 70% retention. There were tension rates have been going up the more secular and insane the world gets. The more Amish kids are staying. It's about 85% now according to Kaufman's statistics. But he sees similar things in conservative families in general. I'm 70 80%. I've kind of seen it my teaching career over 20 years. That's a full generation. I've been able to see the young people that I've taught over that time. And I would say the vast majority of them keep their conservatism into adulthood. So the good news is that liberals have adopted what's called lifestyle values. And lifestyle values when all is said and done, separate sex from procreation. I mean, this is largely through modern contraception in the light. Right or wrong, good or bad is irrelevant. All we have to know is that liberal lifestyle values necessitate the freedom not to reproduce. And they are fulfilling that freedom in spades. We have a number of studies that confirm the fertility differentials between what we just saw, right? Versus the religious conservatives. We have it between conservatives and liberals and we have between like atheists and religious and the fertility differential could not be more night and day. Basically yeah, basically, for every one child, a hardcore liberals having and they don't have the 2.1 replacement level. It's imploded too since COVID. They've gone down to below. This is what I wanted to say in church on Sunday. My oh my, it was like a lot of COVID babies as far as I'm concerned. A lot of newborn babies are wailing in church. So I think it's like the baby boom generation just for the reasons. And the guys who locked us down where we're gonna have our revenge on those people when those babies end up being conservatives..

860AM The Answer
"eric kaufman" Discussed on 860AM The Answer
"A coffee being born and raised in the tropics. But let me tell you, I'm loving the cold, mostly because I get to experience it and she eats frozen mochas any size, any flavor for only 3 99 or less choose from their most popular like the peanut butter frozen mocha made with braces. Rosen code, a mocha or their peanut butter. Banana frozen mocha made with Reese is so enjoy the frozen fun with me. Order on your sheets up and pick it up curbside at select locations, sheets run and done. Disease you sister streaming now, to be honest happened 8 60 AM theater So with Eric Kaufman and you know there was some variation because they were asked at slightly different time periods. But in both cases of a majority of slight majority of African Americans said political correctness was demeaning. Rather than necessary to protect blacks and white liberals were more likely than black liberals to say political correctness was miss unnecessary. Protect one so anyway, White liberals have this more protective attitude. Where's black liberals have more of an emphasis on no political correctness is demeaning. More of an emphasis on I think with zillions rather than the need for protection, which I think is quite interesting. So, so it suggests that political correctness doesn't have the level of support within the black population that one might survive. I'm curious as I look at this chart of Tani See, Coach says he responded to this or even acknowledged it that he's making black people less optimistic. No, no, I mean, you know, I'm not trade with Dane to to respond. I mean, there are some people who are trying to claim that all well, this event will you know you can produce it with with a short paragraph, but it quickly fades away. It's not gonna last You know other kinds of method. Illogical critics. What your fair fair enough. You could make such a good cheeks. I just don't think that given the amount of messaging of that type that is around that this is really convincing counter. Calderon knows especially the disparity. It's it's rather It's rather telling. So you also have one here personal experience of racism and discrimination by level of sadness and anxiety. Walk us through that one. Yeah, so again, In addition to your partisanship and ideology and how much exposure you have to social media, you also are more likely to report experiencing discrimination and racism. If you're generally sad, or anxious s so, for example, if we people who say they are sad or anxious At least half the time are twice as likely as people who say they're never sad or anxious to say they've experienced, you know, discrimination and racism on that holds by the way for white and black. You know, people said so. Whites who who are Satur, anxious half the time arm or are twice as likely to say they experienced discrimination and racism is whites who never experience who who say they're never Satur anxious. The point here being that your underlying psychological state again is gonna predispose you. To answer Yes, I experienced that as discrimination and racism. It makes you more sensitive to these issues. And so a lot of this comes down to again. Perception and framing are at the heart of this problem. It's not a matter of lived experience alone. I mean, lived experience matters. I don't want to devalue that for real racist incidents. But a lot of this is governed by social construction caused by psychology, ideology, exposure to media and so forth, and that's just not being recognized. It's seen as something that's just real that bubbles up out of people's Experience for us. I think we need to be more skeptical and say yes, yes, it could be, but there's also a lot going on in terms of perception to frame these issues. I think that's very wise. So to summarize it all together, we'll post this study on Charlie Kirk dot com. Also the Manhattan Institute There's There's a direct, I gotta say, direct correlation, But there's an argument to be made that that that one of the major contributing factors to people's view on race and racism in America. Media, social media and even political views and that I guess I have one last question is back in the 19 sixties where people do you have this data where people's racial attitudes of view of race as As different where they're disparities based on political viewpoints in the black community. Um, I don't have that data with me The differences within the black community. First of all are smaller, based on ideology than within the white community. Yes, those differences within the whites Have increased over time with partisanship in part polarization, So I would say those differences would have been pretty small amongst African Americans in the sixties compared to now. But but just Yeah, just overall. I mean, I think what this gets to is, you know, we arrest racist incidents and even police shootings. They're never going to be zero. Just like crime is never gonna be zero and poverty is never going to be zero. And the question is, Are we going to have a moral panic and they need emotional response, Not a rational Contest realized proportional response but emotional response in a moral panic. Whenever one of these incidents is circulated on social media as because social media allows you to circulate powerful images, we've got to become more scientific or skeptical about contest realizing just how important And how representative these stories and images are and not to overreact, because that is very negative consequences for the very people that we are trying to help. I think that's that's very well said Well, Eric. Thank you so much for joining our program. Anything in particular you want to plug a book and your website? Well, I mean, you could always check me out on social Media are on Twitter at E P. A. K a. U F M and My website is www dot snaps S and P p s dot net. Thanks again. Thanks so much expectation. So are you making full use of your.

860AM The Answer
"eric kaufman" Discussed on 860AM The Answer
"Put that thing was just Monday or Tuesday of this week that we discuss the commission being formed. That was supposed to look at the whole Supreme Court issue before the commission is even the ink is dry on their commissions. You've got the House Democrats in the Senate Democrats introducing they call it the judiciary active. 2021 J. Second life weeknights at six right before fills gang at seven. 8 60 am the answer. Joe has been pre recorded Everybody welcome to this episode of the Charlie Kirk Show with us today is Eric Kaufman. I'm so excited for this episode Personal Eric. Welcome to the Charlie Kirk show Charlie is going to be here You do phenomenal work. You have a new report out that is sending shock waves throughout the country. Tell us about the report. It's about race and racism. The things they're not supposed talk about in our country walk us through it. Well, really. What this report about is about is how racism is not just something that comes from people's lived experiences. But that is very much shaped by perception, so something maybe an encounter may be perceived as racist or it may be seen is just innocuous. A lot of it depends on things like your exposure to social media and the media, your ideology and also whether you're depressed or anxious. You're mature psychological health. All of those things. Actually, I would argue, are more important than your Personal experience in explaining not just your perception of racism in society, but also your personal experience of racism as well. And so, really, this report goes to a lot of data on survey data to show this No. Sorry. Go ahead. I didn't mean to cut you off. I'm just saying in union report, you conclude that ideology Partisanship and social media influence. The way that we prescribe racism. I'll have to call time out here. How do you define racism? Because the way I grew up Learning about racism. It's one person being discriminatory. A prejudiced against another person based on their skin color. Now racism is portrayed as a power struggle. How do you How do you describe it in this piece? Well, I mean your actions, putting your finger on one of the things which sort of moves and expands and contracts, depending ideology. So part of this is it's defined in terms of subjective survey question, one of which might just be abroad, You know? Have you experienced racism in the past month or week or whatever, one of which might be have you experienced racial discrimination? Some of them in more concrete questions, like people acted like I wasn't smart, you know, or I was stopped and searched, so some of them are a bit more concrete, and some of them are a bit more defining yourself. One of the points here is that, uh, depending on your ideology will define this term war broadly or more narrowly, And that's partly what it counts for greater reported racism. So there isn't a single definition I'm using. I'm allowing to somebody re survey respondents to self define Which accounts for some of the differences that we see. And in fact, racism's been defined, arguably define down or debate. There's a currency so that it it means more and more things. If you are of a particular ideological strike, Absolutely. And there's one part here. I want to focus on that really caught my attention. Because I really have a strong distaste for this person is Tani see Coats? And he's a black pessimist. Which bothers me. I do not like pessimism as a worldview as a zoo a way to approach life. I don't like it, and I think that Your study confirms everything I've been saying about Tani see coats for years where that he actually makes people less likely to believe that they can succeed in our country. Can you talk about that? Because I was so moved by the data backing of what I believed instinctually to be true. Got basically if you what we did or what I did was, I tend a survey of African American respondents. I did it in 2018. I repeated it in 2020. I showed half of half the people of just one paragraph from Tallahassee Coasters work where he talks about. You know this, this very sort of exaggerated portrait of how dangerous it is to be black in America. How everyone's systems have to get you and then they're never gonna let you let you live a normal life. People who read that paragraph were much more about 15 points less likely to say they could make their life plans work out. Generally, this is a measure psychologist, use of people sense of self control, which is linked to their mental well being on other measures of success. And so what we actually see is that exposure to this critical race theory inspired Passage. Just one paragraph really was enough to draw people's sense of self empowerment by a substantial level. So instead of 83% of African Americans who didn't read this passage from Tunney, Haci Coats, saying they could make make their life plans work out on Lee 68% 15 points lower, said they could make their life Plans work out after reading just one paragraph so you can imagine being exposed to this narrative everywhere. Ordinary. Yeah. Yeah, And so it's it's you know, in a way, it's doing the opposite of what it is supposed to do. It's supposed to make the lines of African Americans better, and it's actually having a negative effect on their ability to believe in themselves. Don't know if I agreed that I'm not sure thought Niecy coats actually wants. That's a different conversation. Time. Intentions are hard to conclude, but it's hard to believe based on his literature that he actually I think it's more much more concerned on the external than the improvement. The internal But intentions are tough and that we're not going to spend time on that. But That's TBD. I want to get to this one, which is really interesting. And I want to just compliment you again. These studies Are not easy to do because you're pursuing truth and in pop and popular culture. People don't actually want the truth. They want narrative. And they want a narrative that will confirm their power. Grab you say here Liberal blacks of the college degree are nearly 30 points. We're likely to find a statement by a white person such as quote. Don't notice people's race or quote America is a color blind society and quote offensive than blacks without degrees, who identify as conservative Talk a little bit about that. That's fascinating. That's a major disparity. Well, yeah. I mean, what we see is that even independent of ideology of being liberal or conservative, having a degree or not having a degree, if you have a degree, if you're African American that makes you more likely to believe that the so called micro aggressions such as I don't notice race are offensive. Then if you don't have a degree, so in a way, the Experience or the status of having a university education seems to be an independent force multiplier for this perception of racism for this sort of expanded definition, if you like of racism, and yes, so this is part of again. All of these factors ideology, education, social media exposure. Are actually leading people to frame things as racist, which are arguably not racist on that's contributing to the perception in a way off. This is a rising problem because all the indicators of interracial marriage Police shootings of African Americans have dropped 16 80% since the late justice All of the behavioral attitudinal indicators are moving in the right direction. And yet, if you ask people is racism and increasing problem, that number has been remarkably high..

860AM The Answer
"eric kaufman" Discussed on 860AM The Answer
"And others with all of my mind. Thank you so much for helping me set high standards for myself. Thank you so much for giving me Getting big out of that anti American whole people. Tell me all the time that I am brainwashed, but I told you No, I'm educated. And I was given the best knowledge any black American could receive. Thank you again for elders of us. Wow. Triple 8971 s a G triple 89717243 am Larry elder. We are really factored that kind of studio. Won't invite you to attend a special and exclusive online event with Senator Josh Holly from Missouri. He's written a book called The Tyranny of Big Tech, where he says these mega corpse. Holds the gravest threat to American liberty in decades. What can we do about it? Well, he's hosting an online event on May the sixth, discuss this very thing. It's an ask me anything event to take advantage. You get a copy of the tyranny, Big tech as well. Offer it only by invitation. Go to ask the host dot com for all the details and buy your tickets at Ask a host Dot com. When I was in college, I have a very, very close friend named Frank. And when you win and out of the dorm, the doors automatically locked. And if you didn't bring your passkey, you weren't going to be able to get in. For security purposes. So Frank told me One day he comes to the dorm one of the side doors and he forgot his pass key and he really was in a hurry. And he just stood there and stood there and stood there waiting for somebody to come out because eventually someone was going to come out. So he told me. He stood there for almost almost seven minutes. And finally somebody came out and Frank said, Oh, thank you so much for coming out. I've been waiting in the guise of this distorts not locked. He never even checked it. Moral to the story. So many times the door isn't even locked. But you assume that it is Was on Fox business this afternoon in a show called after the Bell. We're talking about the treatment of Tim Scott by Twitter and People on social media, calling him an uncle Tom and a sell out in all that crap. And I said, never has racism. Been aim or insignificant factor. Success in American life. By almost any measure, you look at During the O. J. Simpson case. What Johnnie Cochran say. As to the motive of why the LAPD the racist LAPD frame this innocent black man. Because at one time he was married to a white woman. That's what he said. Racism, he said. Race plays a part of everything in America, says Johnnie Cochran. A man by the way, who had a white mistress at the time of the trial and a love child. Now, if the racist LAPD is going to get somebody, But once you make that get Johnnie Cochran over O J. Simpson for crying out loud. But that's the line. He pushed. The reason the LAPD on the spot Together this conspiracy to frame this guy is because at one time he married a white one. We can't have that. Well, now, depending upon how you word the pole Percentage of blacks who oppose interracial marriage is higher than percentage of white to do. There is a Local scientist named Eric Kaufman and Jason Riley of the Wall Street Journal. Who's black wrote about this. Kaufman says that racial attitudes have been trending towards Maura and Maura and tolerant more and more tolerance for well over a century. And I told you back in 1991 for crying out loud. 1991 Orlando Patterson, who was a black Harvard sociologist. Every sociologist I've ever met is a lefty, and he's no exception. Voted twice for Obama. 1991. Patterson, and he's still there at Harvard, said that America is now the least. Racist majority Society in the world provides more opportunities and more protections for blacks than any of the country in the world, including all of those of Africa. Did I mention he said that in 1991 for crying out loud. Obama gets a higher percentage of the white vote than John Kerry four years earlier. Anyway, Kaufman says that Quote at a time when measures of racist attitudes and behavior have never been more positive. Get back to that In just a second. We'll be talking to Leo Handy in in a minute now, Peters that Talbot are on a mission. They want to double the number of happy customers of relief factor this year, and they are on track to do that. Here's the deal. Steel discounted three week quick start $19.95 They lose money. The idea, though, is to get you to try to make sure worked for you. Then after that, it's less than the cost of a cup of coffee a day for you to stay out of pain. So you got back neck shoulder, hip foot knee pain from exercise Or just getting older. Consider ordering the three week quick start. Give your body what it needs to heal itself over 70% of those who order the three we quick start, go on to order more. Just go to relief factor dot com Relief acted at home or call 805 183 84 805 183 84.

860AM The Answer
"eric kaufman" Discussed on 860AM The Answer
"To Charlie Kirk show with Eric Kaufman. And you know there was some variation because they were asked at slightly different time periods. But in both cases of a majority, a slight majority of African Americans said political correctness was demeaning. Rather than necessary to protect blacks and white liberals were more likely than black liberals to say political correctness was miss unnecessary. Protect one so anyway, White liberals have this more protective attitude. Where's black liberals have more of an emphasis on no political correctness is demeaning. More of an emphasis on I think with zillions rather than the need for protection. Which I think is quite interesting. So so it suggests the political correctness doesn't have the level of support within the black population that one might serve eyes. I'm curious As I look at this chart of Tani see coaches. He responded to this or even acknowledged it that he's making black people less optimistic. No, no, I mean, you know, I'm not trained with Dane to respond. I mean, there are some people who are trying to claim that all well, this event will you know you can produce it with with a short paragraph, but it quickly fades away. It's not gonna last You know other kinds of method. Illogical critics. What your fair fair enough. You could make such critiques. I just don't think that given the amount of messaging of that type that is around that this is really a convincing counter. Calderon knows especially the disparity. It's it's rather It's rather telling. So you also have one here personal experience of racism and discrimination by level of sadness and anxiety. Walk us through that one s O again. In addition to your partisanship and ideology and how much exposure you have to Social media, you also are more likely to report experiencing. There's still time to play shop Play Win Monopoly. It's.

860AM The Answer
"eric kaufman" Discussed on 860AM The Answer
"Back to Charlie Kirk show with Eric Kaufman. Now, just so everyone listening and watching knows this is how a leftist would wanna say left. It's too political. But you know what I mean. This is how someone who believes in this nonsense would say they'd say well, You know, they're just is racist. But here's two things. They're afraid to answer it truthfully because they'll get out. It is a racist. Or because they're actually not for it. They're just less. They have to be in the shadows. Or this is not even a true metric real racism is in police statistics. Brutality. Can you help reinforce why this is actually a good metric to use because I could already hear They're counter argument. If I were to say something like this on campus. Well, the first thing to say is that you know, even if you were to believe, which I don't that that people are simply lying more The fact they feel oppression alive or is is in itself telling you something, even if you totally agree, But But if we leave that aside again, what belies that is that Even leaving aside the interracial marriage laws being repealed. The actual behavior of people in terms of interracial marriages and an interracial births and so on, has shown the exact same trends. So people are are actually voting with their feet. If you like. I totally agree s so so it's pretty hard to massage that. Well, there's their new argument, though, is that the interracial marriage is whites owning blacks? That's their new thing, right? Is that it? No, that's true. It's a new piece of literature out of the mountain of trash called the Academy and they say that interracial marriage is a is a reduction of colonialist. Um let's say dominate domination of black bodies. Right, so that narrative has to remain that of white domination of people of color into is enjoying that Aaron, if you simply have to inflate the definition of racism to include things, which would have been considered racist in the past. Now I'm happy to have the debate about what should or shouldn't be called racist. But the people who are making these arguments the critical race theory, arguments are typically not scientifically oriented. So in a scientific argument, you have to have an argument that is potentially falsify, able that I could measure something. Test your argument. You have toe be able to refute counter arguments with evidence. None of this is happening. It's all based on smoke and mirrors on sleight of hand definition. So, yeah, I think it's not really worth engaging that too heavily. And they want to dismiss science. They don't consider it to be an acceptable way to make decisions or analyze reality. They prefer much more narratives and Feelings. Emotions. Why Jordan Peterson, Drawing a line in the sand when he did in Canada years ago was so important, saying that if we don't fight now they're going to come and people thought he was not. I didn't And it turns out his prophecy came true way quicker than we realized Where in a lot of these social science disciplines, they've become anything but science. They've become narrative driven, which is what's so refreshing about Your study. Do you have a comment on that? Yeah. I mean, I think that you know, we should be able to have the maturity to be able to say, Well, look, we've discovered a small amount of racism here, so roughing up Suspects. There's a discrepancy between black and white. That cannot be explained by price in saying and various other things, which would explain it that or not racial, so we should be able to have the maturity to point to places where there still is a bit of racism. Um well, not instead, there's this need to back up this narrative of systemic, total izing white supremacist society. These superlative claims that's the narrative part of it, and what that means is it's impossible to contest. As part of the narrative without committing blasphemy. It's kind of what John McWhorter calls a religion of anti racism, which means then that you can't start to pick this apart and test little bits of it and make incremental changes. It's going to be sweeping and revolutionary. Yeah, I think this is very negative trend. It's not all about anything you really is concentrated in certain. Sections of the academy, which are anti scientific, anti empirical. So you have a chart here that shows and it's by Gallup, the percentage of Americans who sided race or racism as the most important problem facing the United States. The fascinating trend I've never seen it. Until now, and in 1965. It was at its highest level right near the Civil Rights Act right near the death of Martin Luther King from that mistaken, I have been a little after that. 52% And the next highest threshold was in 1969 35%. And then it went down with a couple. You know bumps, but it was 3% in 1978 3%. Now help me explain this. Why did it suddenly escalate? It was that the Rodney King riots 15% in the early nineties. Was it jumps to 15 then? Yeah. So it was the Rodney King riots and what followed. Then it went down again. So that kind of is a little bit of a predictable trend. Then is what we're seeing is that there is an incident like George Floyd that gets widely publicized that motivates people to change perceptions, But then it kind of normalizes. What we see here in your chart is that and I'm saying this for audio podcast. I'm sure you have the chart memorized 2016 it goes. To 13%. Where in 2012 it was 2%. Now again, I'm reading numbers of Americans decided Racer. Racism is the most important problem facing United States. It goes up in what looks to be 2018. To be nice to us and 16 almost 17% down and then 2020 19% now, weirdly enough. These are all election years. I'm not going to get in that it's Candace owns this point, not mine. Help us walk through what you learned in this chart. Well, the key point to take away their Charlie is that media is driving this sentiment. Events are driving this sentiment, not knowledge of statistics right about the number of police shootings per capita, so this is narrative driven. It's Ferguson, for example, is Donald Trump's election. Is George Floyd. So on, So these events are what are driving perceptions of what are important issues. No, that's well known in political science. We know media drives the political agenda, but it's just point out then that media framing and I won't say manufacturing. But these issues are seemingly being driven by vivid imagery and rather than people, sort of knowledge of how likely it is to be shot by police. And so we then get on top of That the wife's of Tana Haci coats and others almost suggesting that if you are black at, you know, and you're a young person, you are at high risk of being shot, which is just nonsense, but that then because perpetuated as a myth that that seems to perpetrate throughout the society, and that's only that sort of goes to my point about a lot of this being. Socially constructed by ideology and media on But that does is it distorts people's perceptions? And I don't know whether we'll come to this chart about You know what When I ask people about is it more likely young black man is going to be shot by the police or killed the car accident. You know, it's about 10 times more. They're about 10 times more likely to be killed in a car accident. That's just a fact. Okay, This is not about interpretation. This is just a fact. What is a greater cause of death? For young black men? A car is a much more dangerous objects in a police bullet by 10 Times and yet If you were to ask So, for example, black Biden voters 81% think it's police shooting unbelievable. White liberals who think that Quote unquote. All Republicans are racist to agree with that statement, which is about 60 65% of white liberals agree with that statement. Well amongst them. 70% think that young black men are more likely to be killed by police than in a car accident, So it's actually distorting people's perceptions in approvable way in the sense that they're getting the answer to this question wrong. And it's a factual question. It's not one week me, me, me, me, me, but also you the payroll fast forward, his favorite born film that the powdered doughnut, Okay, What's my line?.