It turns out using assistive intelligence, people share their personal lived experience of what freedom means, what equality means, and we were able to build a “social translation” between people who care, for example, about climate justice, and people, for example, who care about biblical creation care. And they both—although they often talk past each other on social media—were then able to see through social translation that they actually share the same concrete actions and can understand each other using these bridging translation layers. So I’m very happy to report Taiwan is no longer the largest polity to try these methods. And in Japan, the same broad listening ideas have propelled Takahiro Anno, a 34-year-old, to a house of councillor seat. And his party Team Mirai, using this broad listening way, is gaining support.