[inaudible question] >> i think we all have a little john galt in us. i'm not a complete randy and i don't want to be confused with that. i pick and choose the parts -- i do think her description -- and i'm going to get to your question -- john galt was a cheesehead. he was from wisconsin. the pivotal scene in the book is when a factory in wisconsin decides that what they're going to do is they're going to change the way they get paid. they're going to pay everybody based on need, not on the basis of their productivity. so what happens, of course, is that if you whatnot to get more money you become the neediest person. you work the least and you develop all kinds of ways in which you are a victim, all sorts of ways in which you are needier than anybody else and the people that work the hardest realize, i'm working for the benefit of other people. john galt, being the cheesehead he was, stands up and goes, i'm out of here. i'm done. i quit. and he said, i'm just not going to participate in this system. the problem is, when you become a country in which p