
So if we can go instead to a community house -- the community college instead of the other three -- then the argument here is that in Japan, Taiwan, Singapore, India, especially in Taiwan, the more highly educated you are, the more likely you openly practice a faith. I'm openly Taoist. My premier, when I was minister, was openly Catholic. VP Chen Chien-jen literally said God talks to him directly, during parliamentary interpellation. And no country in Asia has a dominant religion. Every religion is like one quarter or less of the population, so it's very diverse. But the point is that spiritual and civic communities keep our social fabric together, so that when emerging technologies come, we don't get pulled apart as in other Western societies.