 Today, we have thousands of Afghanistan evacuees rotating through chow as we speak. At the beginning of each chow period, they will line up outside the door. Once they're ready, the chow time starts. We let them in. A soldier guides them all the way through. They rotate in. They funnel through their chow. Once they receive their plates, they go back down the building to where they eat. They eat their food, they throw their trash away, and they go back to the living quarters. The staff here and everything that my soldiers have done, it's been quite incredible. What we're doing here, even as a humanitarian effort, to feed all these people is quite substantial. For example, we moved 6,000 people in 90 minutes through lunch chow to get everybody fed. I see all types of different people that come in with different experiences. A lot of them come up to me and tell me about their past jobs, about their lives in Afghanistan. What motivates me is to ensure that they're having as best of a time they can here and get their food and take care of their families so they can get to the country that they're moving to next.