1:01:01
in collaboration with our colleagues
at the largest corporations.
1:01:04
So...you know. Yes, probably,
if I went to these countries,
1:01:10
I'd feel...I'd think about things
a little differently, perhaps.
1:01:16
But, at the same time, I don't think
I would forget all my schooling.
1:01:19
I don't think I would forget
all these theories and so on.
1:01:22
So, perhaps one day I'll do that.
1:01:25
This is a money-maker, correct?
1:01:27
Yes. Well, it's a money-maker,
starvation-solver, sure.
1:01:31
How much did McDonald's pay you to
come here and speak this garbage to us?
1:01:35
Did I see a mouse with an ear
growing out of its back?
1:01:38
How are you going to get around
the cultural and legal implications
1:01:41
of cannibalism and basically
asking us to recycle shit?
1:02:11
The reality is that we already
treat people in the Third World
1:02:15
far worse than we treat
our domestic animals.
1:02:18
That's-that's not saying it's right.
It's just saying that's the reality.
1:02:30
Well, after thinking about it
for a little while,
1:02:32
it seems the Plattsburgh lecture
just went great,
1:02:35
and it went exactly the way we
originally expected these lectures to work,
1:02:39
which is that, at a certain point,
it was like a light bulb's going off
1:02:42
in the heads of the different people
in the audience,
1:02:45
and they were realizing that it
was just too crazy to be real,
1:02:48
and yet it was
sort of based in reality.
1:02:50
So, you know,
they started throwing globes at us,
1:02:54
they got angry,
they got frustrated.
1:02:56
It worked exactly
like we thought it would.