 Let's jump in. As as you probably all know, Kevin McCarthy, the speaker of the House of Representative is now the first, the first speaker of the House in American history to be kicked out of his job, to be fired by the House of Representatives. He is also the second, he has served the second shortest term of any House Speaker in history. The first one was shorter because the House Speaker died of, I think, tuberculosis or something, just after he was elected Speaker. The vote came, it was triggered after Matt gets the Representative, the MAGA Representative. It was furious at McCarthy's deal with Democrats, whereby they extended government spending for another, I think it was six weeks, under the existing spending, existing spending, another six weeks in order to have voted a shutdown when, you know, Matt Goetz and his people were not providing any way to prevent a shutdown, not providing any mechanism by which a shutdown could be averted, were not articulating clearly what indeed they wanted. Much of what they wanted was just never going to be achieved, never going to be agreed on. So basically Matt Goetz, the Representative Matt Goetz was pissed off because he didn't get to shut down the government. So he instead of that, you know, triggered a vote on McCarthy. This is something that McCarthy had given Matt Goetz the power to do when he was elected and to get enough votes to get elected. McCarthy agreed that any member of the Republican caucus could demand a vote on his leadership and indeed that vote was done. Eight Republicans, eight Republicans voted against McCarthy, not a single Democrat voted against McCarthy. Four McCarthy, sorry, not a single Democrat voted for McCarthy, which you'd expect them not to vote for him. And now the Republican caucus is scrambling to find a replacement, to find somebody who can both as a Republican serve as, you know, serve as the Speaker of the House for the meaning of the term, which is, I guess, another year, another year and a bit. You know, I don't know about you guys, but I certainly don't feel sorry for Kevin McCarthy. Kevin McCarthy deserved this. He was the definition over the last few years of a slick, unprincipled, do whatever it takes politician with no backbone, no spine, no principles, nothing. He was willing to sell anything and everything to achieve the speakership and deservingly, it's now slipped through his hands. I don't particularly approve of the way it was done. I certainly don't approve of the people who voted against him, but I don't really care. I mean, this is the Republicans facing their demons. This is the Republicans facing their corruption and the fact that they have treated as sane, as normal, as okay, the nutty parts of their political spectrum. I mean, one of the people who did not vote against Kevin McCarthy, actually supported Kevin McCarthy, is Marjorie Taylor Greene, a nutcase who should not be anywhere near Congress. Why did she vote for McCarthy? Because McCarthy had basically embraced her, giving her juicy positions, treated her as a normal human being. Just for that, he deserves to be ruled out as speak anybody who views Marjorie Taylor Greene as normal. It should be ruled out of having any kind of leadership position in the United States. But it really goes back quite a while and his devotion and dedication to Trump. I'll just remind you that what is it about 20 years ago? I can't remember when this exactly. 20 years ago, there was a book published called Young Guns, a new generation of conservative leaders and they were going to change the Republican Party and they were ambitious and optimistic and principled and excited. And the three were the three young guns of the conservative leadership were Eric Cantor, who basically was voted out by a Tea Party candidate in early on and today makes millions of dollars in his job as an investment banker on Wall Street. The only reason he has that job is because of his political connection that the investment bank justifiably can leverage. Paul Ryan, who landed up selling his soul in a variety of different ways and ultimately had a basically quit because even for Paul Ryan, the Republican Party had become too disgusting, despicable, low and unprincipled and pragmatic and he couldn't live really to his credit with the Trump era and therefore resigned. And finally, the guy who actually did survive in politics, Kevin McCarthy. Kevin McCarthy survived in politics by being a complete weasel, by managing to fit whatever the trend happened to be. And so he was a huge supporter of Trump because he knew where the winds were heading. He was a part of the election deniers after the 2020 election. And while in after January 6th, McCarthy initially said Trump was responsible for the riot. Days later, he rushed down to Mar-a-Lago, kissed the ring and rejected any Trump responsibility for anything. When Liz Cheney was appealed for any kind of respect for fellow Republicans, McCarthy basically purged, kicked her out of leadership and ultimately made sure she was defeated in the primary. He's repeatedly tried to sabotage attempts to investigate the January 6th, reversing his support for bipartisan commission and making it kind of a political thing, just Democrats and therefore discrediting the whole commission as a consequence. And then when he tried to run for speakership earlier in the year, he made concession after concession. He sold out things that he said he would never compromise on. He sold out left and right. And he courted Mad Gatz and he got Mad Gatz and Mad Gatz turned around, stabbed him in the back. McCarthy has also gone after and courted anybody on the right who would give him airtime, in particular, if you remember Tucker Carlson, McCarthy gave Tucker Carlson all the security footage with exclusive right to use it, which I think is a massive violation of separation between state and media. But anyway, he did that. He has broken promises both with Republicans and Democrats. He's backed out of agreements. He is so to appease the radicals is the wrong word, the nutcases on his right. And while he worked with Democrats to get the spending resolution, after he backstabbed Democrats and everybody else, many, many times nobody was sympathetic to him. So he's gone and good riddance. I'm not sure the next guy's going to be any better, but at least good riddance. Maybe, I don't know that anybody will learn a lesson from this, but maybe some Republicans will learn a lesson from this.