►
From YouTube: Summer X - Enterprise Session 1b
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B
A
C
But
but
yeah
exactly
so,
the
thing
is
like
you
have
to.
I
think
that
two
things
one
is
a
lot
of
the
cost
of
the
350,
does
not
go
into
materials,
so
meaning
the
house
that
they
build
does
not
necessarily
have
more
stats
or
is
stronger
or
better
than
what
you
could
build
for
a
lot
less
because
you're
not
paying
the
fees
and
the
age
aways
and
you're,
not
fighting
city
hall
and
increasing
land
whatever.
C
But
it's
I
think
it's
also
important
to
be
flexible
in
the
sense
that
say
someone
who's
really
really
poor
and
they
cannot
afford
the
best
house
that
you
can
build
them,
even
though
it's
still
it's
like
says
200k,
they
only
have
100k.
Can
we
okay?
There
is
an
architect
who
is
called
alejandro
ravenna
and
he
came
up
with
a
concept
of
incremental
housing
because
he
had
this
issue
like.
Why
do
we
build
shitty
houses
for
poor
people
right,
small
and
bad?
Why
do
we
do
that?
Like
it's,
it's
terrible
like?
C
Would
you
live
in
it?
No,
so
why
did
you
build
it
for
other
people?
So
he
came
up
with
a
concept
of
half
a
good
house.
If
you
can
only
have
half
you
get
a
smaller
house
and
it's
good,
but
it's
great
it's
expandable
and
that's
why
we
came
we're
also
working
with
the
expandable
situation,
which
is
you
don't
start
off
with
something
weak?
B
C
E
F
B
B
H
E
E
C
Energy
production
treat
your
own
waste
water
catchment.
Those.
G
H
Regarding
the
concept
of
replicable
housing
enterprise,
you
think
do
do
people
think
that
this
could
do
it
like
if
we
try
to
define
this
package,
that
does
it
are
we
on
the
right
track,
or
should
you
be
even
doing
something
else?
I
mean
it's
a
question
worth
worth
asking.
We
say
we
study
industry
standards,
what
works
for
the
concept
of
solving
housing,
so
you
got
to
start
with
asking
what
is
solving
housing?
A
F
A
Do
you
remember
what
oh?
So,
if
you
didn't
do
it
as
a
module
that
you
only
need
to
put
a
a
load-bearing
wall
either
it
needs
like
a
two
by
six
every
24
inches,
but
then,
with
our
system
we're
doing
one
on
every
side
yeah.
So
then
we
ended
up
having
two
load-bearing
studs
right
next
to
each
other.
Where,
like
the
adjacent
system.
F
One
of
the
concepts
and
ideas
that
can
really
contribute
a
lot
for
the
design.
You
know,
because
if
we
are
having
two
things
that
one
beside
the
other,
although
there
are
two
different
modules,
maybe
we
could
design
something
that
can
have
the
same
weight
capacity,
but
as
one
but
in
two
sites.
This
kind
of
thing.
C
Right
well,
okay,
so
for
one
thing
I
just
wanted
to
say,
like
I
materials
is
something
I'm
really
interested
in.
I
think
that
materials
like
the
development
of
new
materials
is
critical
for
recycling
plastic
for
making
houses.
You
know
easy
to
build
and
all
of
that,
but
I
think
that
we
always
have
to
think
this
always
comes
up,
because
people
have
great
ideas
for
materials
and
relationships.
C
The
thing
is,
we
have
to
work
in
two
tracks,
because
the
reality
is
that
between
one
material
being
developed
and
it
being
massively
adopted
in
the
construction,
the
industry
does
at
least
10
years.
Minimum
right,
like
architects,
will
tell
me
they
will
not
work
with
a
material
or
a
builder.
That
is
less
than
10
years
old
because
of
the
liability,
because
you
don't
know
how
it's
going
to
behave
once
it
hits
a
hurricane
or
heat
or
so
we're
talking
about
two
different
scales.
C
One
skill
is
like:
let's
help
people
right
now
on
one
track
and
the
other
track
is
like
stick
money
that
we
make
doing
that
and
spend
it
developing
materials
that
are
they're
only
gonna
really
possibly
be
massively
adopted
in
five
to
ten
years.
If
you're
super
optimistic,
so
I
think
that
has
to
be
that
kind
of
like
double
otherwise.
F
C
So
I
really
feel
like
we
gotta,
do
it
there's
this
girl
who
came
visit
us
a
a
few
weeks
ago,
and
she
has
this
great
idea
for
3d
printed
houses,
but
even
though
I
stepped
in
her
it's
like
well,
if
you
I
feel
this
urgency,
I
think
that
she
also
knew
that
we're
talking
about
years.
She
can
build
10
now,
but
before
she
has
built
thousands,
it
will
be
10
years
like
no
less
than
that.
B
When
businesses,
so
one
of
the
key
components
is
when
businesses
are
are
beginning
that
are
outside
of
the
osc
system
and
are
on
forked
tracks,
what
is
going
to
be
the
model
to
help
get
back
into
the
thing?
Will
it
just
be
sending
people
to
training?
Will
there
be
something
I'm
not
saying
more
expected?
But
what
is
your
guys's
vision
for
that.
H
Well,
the
open
source
bias
states
that
if
we've
got
a
good
kernel,
then
they
will
start
contributing
to
it.
Just
like
microsoft.
Now
is
the
number
one
contributor
to
to
the
linux
kernel.
People
will
start
adopting
if
it
works.
The
key
is:
is
it
going
to
be
working?
Are
we
getting
enough
bodies
to
show
up
to
develop
and
coordinate
effort?
If
we
solve
that,
then
people
will
would
want
to
come
to
this,
because
it's
got
value.
H
It's
just
the
simple
thing
and
it
was
a
happy
correlation
and
and
we're
not
trying
to
threaten
them
that
oh
yeah,
this
is
gonna.
Take
over
it's
just
like
we're
gonna
be
innovating
yeah.
I
absolutely
plan
to.
H
H
You
gotta,
like
I
thought
about
this,
like
I
thought
about
like
getting
taken
out
or
whatever,
because
I
think
some
ideas
could
be
very
powerful,
but
no,
no.
I
don't
have
to
fear
that
if
I'm
I
adopt
a
mindset
of
inclusive.
H
So
that's
a
that's
a
kind
of
a
mind
shift,
but
I
think
it's
very
helpful
because
I'm
going
to
say,
oh
cool
man
join
us
or
you
know,
let's
collaborate,
you
can
just
totally
shift
that
dynamic.
So
it's
about
really
this
complete
cultural
creation
and
all
fronts.
Man,
that's
that's
what
we
got
to
do.
Yeah.
I
With
some
of
the
like
the
window,
ocd
panels,
for
example,
I
think,
would
be
a
really
cool
application
of
that
3d
printed
jigs
we've
talked
about.
H
I
Yeah,
I
guess
from
like
the
enterprise
tractor,
like
I
lean
more
toward
the
the
second
longer
term
track
as
opposed
to
the
you
know,
someone
download
gets
a
cd
and
then
goes
off
upgrade
on
their
own,
so
we
see
like
the
enterprise
like
we
would
have
access
to
gap,
but
we
have
enough
capital
to
buy,
or
here
you've
got
the
cnc
machines.
J
I
C
I
Some
type
of
stability
for
yeah
the
actual
implementation
details.
Obviously
you
can
actually
change.
I
just
think
that's
like
an
area
where
you
should
put
more
more
r
d
or
more
attention.
C
Right-
that's
just
like
this,
so
we
just
this
is.
This
is
the
first
time
that
we
say:
okay,
we
are
happy
with
these
modules
sufficiently
happy.
That
doesn't
mean
that
it's
done.
It's
like
okay,
now,
because
you'll
see
that
every
of
the
three
houses
in
this
prototype
that
were
framed
all
the
modules
are
different
because
we
keep
coming
so
now
now,
it's
time
to
do
you
know
what
you
guys
are
saying
which
is
like
okay
now,
if
this
is
how
it
monitors,
let's
really
refine
it.
C
And
also
like,
I
think
that
it
will
also
be
that
you
know
right
now
we're
working
in
a
workshop.
There's
multi-purpose
right.
If
you
have
a
workshop,
that
only
does
this
everything
is
set
up
just
right.
The
tools
are
where
they
need
to
be.
You
have
your
stops.
You
have
your
story
stakes.
Everything
is
just.
A
Right
yeah,
you
can
either
get
like
a
like.
A
wood
master
is
a
like
the
pinnacle
of
a
woodworking
gear,
but
it's
like
five
thousand
dollars
and
with
that
you
would
have
stops
built
right
up
to
the
things
that
make
it
super
easy
to
make.
All
these
cuts
super
clean,
no
error,
but.
G
C
Five
thousand
dollars
yeah,
so
I've
only
seen
other
places,
people
that,
if
there's
everything
you
need
in
your
business,
that
is
not.
I
thought
you
said
fifty
I
mean
I
registered
50
because
I
didn't
want
to
believe
there
was
only
five
five
wasn't
acceptable
for.
G
C
K
The
question
I'm
not
practically
interested
in,
but
is
there.
I
C
F
C
Okay,
so
the
next
step
now
is
what
I'm
going
to
be
working
on,
like
the
very
next
baby
step.
Is
all
the
construction
details
for
this.
H
C
C
I
think
you
will
be
really
like
refining
the
documentation,
so
it's
like
less
ambiguous
and
clearer
in
refining
processes,
field
processes
in
those
jigs
that
you're
talking
about
and
just
think,
okay.
This
was
confusing,
or
this
was
hard
to
do
what
we
do
instead.
B
On
the
front
end,
safety
and
basic
carpentry
skills
should
be
like
gone
over
with
people
before
they
get
in
the
shop
to
deserve
some,
I'm
just
saying
just
for
their
own
safety.
C
B
Oh,
maybe
maybe
yeah.
B
Yeah
so
yeah,
that's
all
I
was
just
saying
just
like
how
to
cut
within
with
a
miter
saw.
C
G
C
H
No,
no
so
I
mean
my
question
would
be
like.
What's
what's
useful,
to
get
out
of
these.
The
enterprise
sessions
is
something
that
I
mean.
The
idea
was
to
refine
actually
get
on
working,
docks
and
and
refine.
You
know
actually
get
progress
like
what
we're
asking
right
now,
like
document
it
make
it
accessible.
H
H
H
There's
also
customer
support.
Does
that
lend
itself
to
like,
for
example,
like
anthony,
if
you're
gonna
set
up
your
enterprise
or
lance
I
mean
whatever
other
people
are
doing,
is
there
stuff
that
we
can
actually
collaborate
on
generating?
H
H
You
know
that
kind
of
stuff
that
that
relates
to
enterprise
or
just
looking
at
the
numbers
like
what
are
the
you
know,
one
one
big
question
is:
what's
what
are
some
very
explicit
business
models,
there's
just
summaries
like
business
revenue
models
like
I
mentioned
the
one,
the
100k
package?
Well,
that's
one
version,
but
what
are?
How
can
we
develop
and
test
very
specific
other
things
that
we
can
do
that
are
all
kinds
of
derivatives
of
this.
C
And
the
one
thing
I
was
actually
going
to
say,
then
we
started
talking
about
the
materials.
We
talked
about
a
little
bit
about
the
ideas
we
had
for
the
businesses,
but
then
there's
the
the
questions.
We
have
not
been
able
to
answer
satisfactory,
which
is
okay,
so
someone
who
can
who
has
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
or
can
get
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
to
get
one
of
these?
But
what
about
the
people?
Who
don't
even
have
a
thousand
dollars
and
they
can't
get
a
loan
and
their
lot
is
in
a
bad
part
of
the
city.
C
F
B
So
I'm
thinking
that
so
you
got
the
25,
that's
likely
going
to
go
back
to
the
business.
My
thing
is
one
of
the
marketing
things
is
going
to
be.
Some
part
of
your
house
is
going
to
actually
go
to
that
because
with
park
part
of
the
marketing,
but
you
just
you-
you
stipulate
basically
it's
going
to
be
the
rich
paying
for
these
houses
right.
B
So
my
revenue
model
is,
I'm
not
actually
going
to
be
in
that
150
range
for
my
for
the
cd
go
home
that
I'd
be
buying
for
like
mid-tier
clients,
in
order
to
pull
some
of
that
revenue
for
those
types
of
events
or
to
invest
back
into
the
osc
techno,
you
know
components.
C
G
G
C
One
model
people
have
been
using
is
the
rent
to
own,
where
you
pay
very
little
rent
and
you
set
the
price
of
that,
but
they
still
pay
something
or
they
build
for.
Oh,
they
say
they
help.
You
build
five
houses,
but
that's
kind
of
like
because
that
that's
the.
C
G
A
Now
some
of
those
people
would
be
open
to
having
roommates,
so
it
may
just
want
to
live
by
themselves
entirely,
but
one
way
or
another
they
vacated
some
other
place.
That
now
is
available.
So
without
doing
anything
directly,
you
would
directly
be
affecting
the
ability
of
like
low
income
or
homeless
people
to
find
housing.
B
F
E
F
I
feel
that
that's
something
that
is
very
powerful
because
you're
giving
them
the
possibility
of
getting
this
house
and,
at
the
same
time,
being
able
to
work
there
or
help
and
have
the
the
possibility
of
getting
something
like
something.
J
G
H
H
Are
but
there's
a
bank
partner
involved
that
provides
the
money
that
the
people
pay
the
bank
because
we
don't
want
to
become
rent
collectors,
that's
a
different
job,
so
some
kind
of
a
an
arrangement
with
a
bank.
So
if
so,
I
was
told
so
my
mentor
said:
here's
the
deal
get
yourself
land.
If
you
can
afford
the
price
of
land,
which
is
maybe
3
000
like
in
kansas
city,
you
can
get
a
bunch
of
lots
that
are
like
starting
at
1.
500.,
kansas
city
right
now
go
to
the
kansas
city,
land
trust
yeah.
H
They
have
that.
So
you
get
that
money
for
that
house.
Can
a
bank
actually
loan
you
money
on
that?
Because
you
have
that
capital
if
we
can
make
friendly
relationships
with
banks
that
could
be
able
to
do
that.
That
would
be
a
great
step.
Somehow
we
would
have
to
get
enough
rapport
or
enough
reputation
to
say
that
you
know
we
can
maybe
like
bail
out
the
person
that
fails
or
something
or
I
don't
have
some
kind
of
reserves
that
we
can
do
that.
C
J
C
Don't
get
into
it,
don't
sign
any
contract
just
if
this
is
too
restrictive,
walk
away.
The
problem
is
those
are
the
desirable
zones
and
those
are
the
zones
with
the
good
schools
in
the
good
stores
and
the
good
jobs
so
we're
so
we
are
we're
having
to
basically
do
two
one
of
two
things:
either
going
to
the
worst
neighborhoods
and
then
create
those
resources.
We
don't
just
build.
J
C
J
C
Like
that,
and
then
another
possibility
we
talked
about,
is
we
built
outside
the
cities
outside
the
server
so
like,
where
it's
really
cheap
or
you
can
get
a
thousand
acres
and
start
developing
or
something,
but
then
that
has
to
come
with
jobs.
So
then
we
have
to
also
be
the
job
provider.
So
maybe
that's
where
you
get
your
employees
for
your
construction.
Business
is
there's
this
package.
C
You
know
it's
not
like
a
cult
or
anything.
People
are
free
to
come
and
work
for
someone
else
or
just
buy
a
house,
but
where
there's
that
opportunity
of
I
come
from
an
industrial
town
that
was
founded
by
one
guy
around
one
factory
in
the
entire
town
lived
off
of
that
right.
So
it
was
like
a
you
know,
a
factory
town
and
there's
still
towns
like
that,
so
that
works
to
submit
in
some
extent,
especially
if
it's
not
centralized.
If
your
business
is
not
the
only
one.
A
So
you
could
find
like
essentially
any
town
that
has
the
has
suffered
the
the
blight
to
the
blue
collar,
find
an
abandoned
warehouse
factory,
yeah.
G
J
C
D
G
C
K
G
K
G
K
K
C
Right,
it's
just
that
in
order
to
solve
housing,
it's
not
just
we're
trying
to
build
a
house.
It's
like
we're
trying
to
solve
housing.
So
we
need
to
create
a
product
that
does
something
to
people
right.
I
mean
that
actually
solves
their
problems.
Otherwise
it's
just
it
solves
indirectly,
like
you
guys
are
saying
this.
C
If
it
brings
the
mark,
the
price
is
down,
but
it's
still
you're
still
a
slave
at
the
end
of
the
day,
if
you
still
have
to
have
a
job
that
you
hate
to
pay
for
the
house,
the
really
nice
house-
but
you
know
so
kind
of
like
more
thinking
about
those
integrated
solutions.
I
think-
and
it's
funny
that
you
should
mention
certification,
because
I
just
read
a
really
cool
article
and
I
hope
sometimes
you
read
things
and
you
go
like
this
sounds
too
good
to
be
true,
but
apparently
there
is
a
town
in
belgium.
C
It
was
terrible
like
it
was
the
dirty
it
had
been
defined
like
as
the
dirtiest
town
in
belgium.
They
had
like
high
rates
of
crime
and
high
rates
of
unemployment,
and
this
one
mayor
decided
that,
oh
and-
and
it
was
it
was
like
part,
belgium
in
part
like
muslim
immigrants,
and
there
was
a
lot
of
like
tension
there
and
apparently
a
lot
of
the
population
once
don't.
You
know,
joined
like
jihads,
and
it
was
bad.
C
So
this
the
basically
what
he
decided.
He
was
gonna
de-radicalize
the
town,
and
he
created
a
lot
lots
of
strategy.
I
can
send
the
article
to
the
group.
It
was
like
a
lot,
multiple
strategies
that
he
used,
but
one
of
the
things
that
avoided
then
he
succeeded.
C
Apparently
I
mean,
according
to
this
article,
I
would
like
to
go
and
see
it
with
my
own
eyes,
because
it
sounds
like
really
too
good
to
be
true,
but
and
now,
but
one
of
the
things
that
he
avoided
the
gentrification
problem
in
which
now
you
have
all
of
these
people.
C
You
know
young
and
hip
and
whatever
and
you're,
pushing
out
the
pores
that
in
belgium
there
is
high
rate
of
home
ownership,
so
even
the
poor
people
own
their
homes,
so
meaning
the
fact
that
an
artist
lived
next
door
did
not
price
them
up
because
they
already
paid
out.
You
know
the
amount
of
mortgaging
increase
or
anything.
C
C
Okay,
so
he
did
several
it's
like
lots
and
lots
and
lots
of
little
things,
okay,
but
so
one
of
the
things
he
did
was
okay,
I'll.
I'm
trying
to
remember
the
examples,
but
folks
one
example
was
like
everyone
who
moves
into
that
town,
especially
people
who
are
from
abroad,
is
paired
up
with
someone
who
already
lives
there
for
six
months
and
every
day,
every
week
they
meet
for
coffee,
and
they
tell
this
is
how
you
open
a
bank
account.
C
This
is
how
you
know,
and
then
so,
they're
creating
these
relationships
already
between
the
the
current
residents
and
someone
who's
coming
new,
so
that
already
designs,
like
all
the
tension
and
all
of
that
stuff,
other
things
that
he
was
doing
was
I'm
trying
that
one.
I
I
got
a
little
stuck
with
you,
because
it
was
so
unusual.
H
Reading
it,
but
the
thing
is:
here's
the
deal.
This
is
your
standard.
It's
a
wonderful
life
story.
The
idea.
H
Do
it
that's
kind
of
how
we
have
to
think
right
so,
but
that's
the
only
solution,
that's
a
deep
solution,
because
it
means
a
lifetime
of
commitment.
It's
not
something
you
do
for
a
business
plan
in
school.
H
Maybe
it's
something
that
you
commit
your
life
to,
and
it's
kind
of
how
we
think
about
this.
It's
like!
If
we,
if
you
meditate
on
us,
you
would
like
could
say.
Okay,
you
know,
life
might
be
kind
of
crappy,
but
the
only
solution
is
like
getting
into
those
issues
and
you
got
to
meet
those
issues
head
on
like
you
can't
run
away,
it's
like
the
earth
is
getting
smaller,
so
the
only
way
is
to
go
in
it
and
try
to
solve
it,
but
that's
that's
kind
of
how
we
try
to
make.
C
B
Well
to
his
point,
I
would
just
like
to
say
that,
if
it's
starting
to
gentrify,
then
that
likely
means
that
the
program
is
working.
B
I
mean
that's
just
the
unfortunate
thing
about
our
our
system
here
in
the
united
states.
Is
that
that
that
usually
happens
when
things
like
nice,
housing
and
industry
begin
to
move
back
in
you
know,
artists
and
yeah.
A
So
when
we
treat
housing
as
a
commodities
market,
the
gentrification
is
like
this
terrible
thing:
you're
stuck
if
you're
not
trying
to
make
a
bunch
of
money
off
of
real
estate,
then
gentrification
is
there's
like
always
like
this
ebb
and
flow,
or
the
cycle
as
like
a
neighborhood
rises
up
and
then
like
falls
and
whatnot
and
gentrification
is
like
the
inverter
rising
up.
So
then,
if
you're
not
forcing
out
poor
people
which,
if
you're
building
houses
that
people
are
making
12
bucks
an
hour,
can
afford
then
you're
not
forcing
those
people
out.
G
A
C
A
C
And
that's
what
this
guy
did,
which
is
he
got
all
of
these.
He.
He
really
will
like
made
this
neighborhood
so
much
nicer
and
he
got
all
of
these
people
to
move
people
who
lived
there
did
not
move
out.
So
suddenly
they
went
from
having
a
really
dirty,
neighborhood
and
feeling
really
dejected
to.
If
the
government
would
say
if
the
swing
in
the
parking
lot,
the
children's
playground
doesn't
work
or
call
up
city
hall,
because
now
they
care
right
because
they're
like
no.
No,
it's
nice.
I
like
it.
You
know
right.
H
Right
so
encourage
the
people
who
are
new
to
town
to
go
to
actually
to
the
white
kids,
schools
or
the
natives.
C
And
they
did
this
by
simply
going
through
people's
houses
and
persuading
them
to
do
it.
There
was
no
rule
that
they
had
to
do,
but
it
was
like.
Oh,
you
have
to
have
like.
If
the
us
will
be
like
you
have
to
have
15
exchange
or
something
no,
they
they
did
it
in
a
really
personal
way
in
which
they
sat
down
with
the
parents
and
they
persuaded
them
to
do
this.
H
Method,
yeah,
okay,
but
we
gotta
address
like
there's
so
so
how
do
you
get
like
if
you
go
to
kansas
city,
you're
gonna,
see
like
true
style
and
like
on
one
side?
It's
ghetto
other
side.
That's
really!
Nice!
Yeah!
It's
like
holy
cow,
this
very
explicit
division.
How
did
that
happen?
Well,
it's
all
planned.
It's
redlining,
but
also
so
I
googled
does
redlining
exist
today.
Yeah
it
does
so
so
things
like.
Can
that
person
that.
H
Let's
say
you
get
a
2
000
lot.
Does
that
actually
play
in
in
a
subtle
way
like
that?
You
actually
can't
get
money
because
there's
certain
prejudice
like
it
gets
into
those
deeper
questions
which
don't
have
such
easy
solutions,
so
it's
kind
of
baked
in
and
I
don't
know
how
you
solve
that
I
mean
we
can
as
osc.
Perhaps
we
can
have
a
fund
that
helps
people
or
something
like
that,
but
I
mean
it's
a
whole
systems
issue.
It's
like
gotta
improve
the
whole
system
to
make
this
kind
of
stuff
go
away.
K
H
F
A
It
it's
wanting
to
do.
It
is
vastly
different
than
getting
it
done.
J
H
J
H
When
well,
what's
because
that
was
actually,
I
was
thinking,
okay,
so
after
let's
try
to
keep
the
the
work
day
to
like
5,
30
and
then
or
five,
and
then
do
this,
like
maybe
for
an
hour
like
daily
see
if
it
leads
anywhere.
If,
if
we're
making
any
progress
on
any
substance,
oh
no
lance
did
you
have
any
thoughts
on
that
pro
that
or
anything
or
I
don't
know
how
to
make
this,
because
you're
gonna
be
here
for
a
long
time.
H
K
K
H
Right
yeah,
maybe
the
first
thing
to
talk
about
is
who
exactly
is
this
target
market
that
we're
after
and
do
we
have
a.
B
Clarity
on
that,
I
can
tell
you
about
the
average
american
consumer
average
house
price
during
33.00.
D
B
K
K
K
K
F
B
And
I
plan
on
building
houses
to
rent
out
as
well
as
capital
streams
as
well,
which
is
it
there
are
things
that
are
within
our
romantic
ideals,
about
open
source
and
there's
the
real
capital
markets
that
actually
run
the
united
states
that
we
have
to
compete
against
that
we'll
have
to
we're
we're
trying
to
balance
those
things,
the
loving
and
and
spreading
of
this
message,
while
still
you
know
getting
actually
down
to
the
brass
tacks
of
making
money.
You
know,
because
if
people
see
our
houses
making
money,
it
will
do
the
work
itself.
B
B
So,
if
it,
if
it
has
to
be
about
the
cvco
home,
and
how
I'm
going
to
relate
that
and
use
it
as
a
kind
of
a
springboard,
then
I'll
focus
on
the
seating
combinations.