>> no, it's what people do in our own lives, like william wilburforce, led the abolitionists, but it wasn't the parliamentarians, it was the movement that swept the country. i've got dads, moms, parents, and i'm a little league baseball coach. those kind of life choices are what build social movements and that's the only thing that ever changes politics. what we do in our own lives is what the book is about and how that can change politics and culture and just the, the first sentence of the book ss, our life togethercane better. and that's the hunger i think people are feeling now. >> jim, just very briefly. you've been talking about some of these ideas for a long time. other people have been talking about the common good, what makes you think things are different now, that there's a new receptivity now? >> well first of all, watching the political narrative at night after being all day on sabbatical i took quiet and reflection and study and writing, the more i watched it at night, i wasn't engaging in it, the more depressing it was, polarized, paralyzed, hate, fear, nger. we've lost