 We have a lot of talk going on in Washington about this cold industry issue but it's kind of like the weather. Everybody wants to talk about it, nobody wants to do anything about it. Michigan County is the most single powerful legislator in America, as the majority leader of the Senate. He's been in office two years, he was here two years ago, Floyd, a lot of you heard him promise he was going to stop this war on coal. To this day, he's not passed one bill. Not one bill to help the cold industry. Republicans have control of both houses of Congress, yet they complain about the regulations. Well, guess what? In the pecking order of things, a law supersedes and nullifies the regulations. So if you believe the regulations are over-supported and burdensome, and you've got control of both houses of Congress, pass a law that says that regulations don't avoid them. It's practically a matter of saying they don't want to do it. See, I think there needs to be some continued development of the coal industry so that we can use it, put the miners we have in place right now back to work while they develop other skills in other regions if they need to do so or want to do so. But we need to get what coal we have and can get back and get out. We need to reduce the regulations on the coal, as you said we can. You've got to look at the two parties. Which party is more for regulation and which is for less regulation? Democrats are much more for EPA regulation coal, and that's what's killed the coal industry. And I think that as far as the president is concerned, if he can relax some of those regulations, then we're going to be able to get coal mined again and get people back to work.