professor arlie hochschild. okay. we've got a few micrornas around. so if have a question, i think just raise your hand. we'll find you. we have a question here. all right. i'm going to say thank you so much for a wonderful talk. and i really appreciate the metaphor of bilingualism as who grew up in the reddest of red, in the smallest of small towns. i also deeply appreciate your effort to understand the distress and rage of those communities on their own terms. and i think you're absolutely right. it's undeniable the point that you make in your book that those folks, my friends from school, got the story wrong about the origins, their distress. but that you get the story wrong, doesn't you weren't wronged. and i think collective the new interpreters of the rural white working class leave an important part of the story and that is the extent to which the democratic party at turns has been indifferent or hostile to the interests the interests of those places and where we keep talking about them as having gotten their story wrong we can ignore them and