 I think what you can say to Kramer is, the president's asked me and Dirksen about withholding another $400 million. He can withhold it. You can't do a damn thing about it. You can pass a resolution through this house, tell him not to, and he'll veto the living hell out of it. And we're a hell of a poor people to be talking about withholding expenditures, and then when he withholds them, we make him cancel them. Now, I'll get him not to take this other action, and I'll get it released for you as soon as the year's over at a reasonable time, maybe August, September, somewhere along that where we could use it. But let's don't get this thing in partisan politics, if you... Let me ask if I understand. You earmarked or set aside $400 million. Right, that's right. We've withheld that, at the range. Right. And you have contemplated or discussed the possibility of another poor man. Right. That's right. And I've told them and announced publicly that we're considering it, but we have not done it. So that they're... That's what really stirred up the opposition when they heard the second withholding. Now, do I understand that even though you've discussed it and so forth, you are going to let that go out or...? I would just forget it and cancel it and let it go on out if I could buy them off. But you would stand firm on the 400s we all discussed. That's right. But until we decided that we could release it, and I'd be glad to talk to you about it, that whenever you get there, whenever we need some jobs, whenever we need to release it, I'm not the... Or I want to do it for the economy, period. Well, let me talk to Bill Primer. That's right. And talk to him, Dirksen, and let's get this hearing over in the Senate stopped. And what I will do, I'll take no action on impounding the other 400. If they challenge me and want them running the ground, I can damn easily do it. And I don't believe you can win between now and June 30th. I don't want to, but I just want to help the economy and I honestly think that we ought to hold it a little while longer, but we ought to release some of the housing, then the road ought to come right after it. I think you kind of ought to do it by priorities. I think the soldiers are entitled to theirs, and I release $600 million because we've held it 18 months. And I'm going to release some of the housing sometime in the spring. Then I'm willing to go along with the roads. Can I talk to you about another matter? Yes, or anything you want to, anytime. Matter of fact, I resent a little bit. You don't call me that, but you beat Charlie Haddock, you used to call me. Dirksen called me every week about something. I think we ought to get along better. I don't mind you having all the men. If I expected I'd gotten a real emergency, I'd get more votes in your place and I'd do some other places anyways. Go ahead. What you got on your mind? You got a lot in place before. I mean, if the country was involved and the flag was going down, I imagine I could hardly fire on the Republican side and get more help than I could sometimes out of rules and calling some of my own going. Go ahead now. What you got on your mind?