all right now I'm excited to share our next piece my first experience ever living in Israel was in a kyboots actually the one that you're about to see it kyboots is a special collective community that's unique only to Israel people seem have actually been around since 1909 and are known for pioneering the state but I don't want to give away too much so here's the real breakdown of what it's like to live in a modern day of socialist community there are some who claim that a real utopia exists and it's located right here in Israel it's called okie boots this is kibbutz imagine on one of 275 collective communities throughout Israel in other words members share ownership of everything my house is this house your car is my car and your wife is my wife they sustain a socialist lifestyle which means that everybody makes the same amount of money no matter what they do for a living but money is no object because these communities promise that you'll have everything that you could possibly desire so how does it work in kibbutz Ramat openam we had about 480 members will make around 5,000 to check us a month where there were doctors farmers teachers whatever well that in about another 1000 for each kid a family may have that may not sound like much but almost everything you need is covered by the key books we don't pay rent for our houses we don't pay any bills we don't have municipality taxes anytime we have a problem with our house any kind of repair we need the first experiment now healthcare is completely covered by the kibbutz including a dentist and it's needed psychologists we don't need to pay for nursery or preschool because the kibbutz has it for free from the three months we love we're now turn 17 I'll get my own apartment totally covered by the kyboot cool right if I want to go to college my parents don't have to worry about it I know what you're thinking he's probably gonna need a ride that's not a problem here we have about a hundred cars and we can take which car we want and you can drive what and we don't even have to pay for the gas but what about food we have a kibbutz dining hall that sells breakfast and lunch everyday and we even have dinners on Fridays plus the leftovers go to charities it's like one big family meal all the time for an average of three to six shekels a meal the selection is pretty incredible I mean it's a buffet so believe me it tastes better than it looks and don't forget basically your entire backyard is a living breathing beast want to go to the gym the pool play tennis need a haircut or a facial on a daily professional laundry service the kyboots has all of that and it's all for free if you're a member of course so how do I sign up not even the kids of members are actually true members until they decide they have until the age of 30 to explore the outside world and then if they want to come back they have to be approved but if you're an outsider well you better get married to one of those children but even then you'll still have to live on the kibbutz for at least a year before the kibbutz decides if they like you enough and there are lots of people seem like Roma tokens that are valued at hundreds of millions of shekels now if you're wondering why that matters it's kind of like having a community that's willing to invest in your passion for example if you want to open your own business the kibbutz will finance it as long as you can prove that it's ultimately going to be profitable and not all kibbutz members have to work on the kyboot in fact one of the kibbutz is biggest sources of income comes from the salaries of members who work as major executives outside but don't get me wrong people seem like rahmato Hannon have some extremely successful businesses themselves in fact people team as a whole account for 40% of israel's agricultural output and nine percent of the country's industrial turn out together that's worth almost 10 billion dollars the question is are you willing to give up your capitalist lifestyle for this type of utopia listen we don't share a wife who you take my wife is wife thought everything is everybody almost everything now this is just a very brief and surface-level look into what a kyboots is all about we could literally make an entire episode about these communities but one thing is for certain if you do travel to Israel go and check out a beautiful kibbutz like non-math Johanna it certainly changed my life and future