 I've been reduced to about a one-glock game a year now. Let's see what we've got here. It's just as annoying as a bad shot as it goes with the game as we go into it. I've got a lot of questions to come up with. Oh, please, please, I should never give up. Well, a little more in that read. Oh, it's just camera data. Lights up in two ways, sometimes three-way. The youngsters are on the streets. So one day the commanding officer of Omaha, Fort Omaha and the visiting general are standing there. Someone had sent a young reserve officer on horseback over with a message. And he came galloping in at full speed. And maybe he had a suriminal torsion. I don't know, but when he turned on the range, that horse put it on all four. And he went right along with the horse and started to land it on his feet, still holding the range of his left foot, and was facing the two generals. And he went into a salute. I must say the visiting general very slowly and deliberately responded. But as he was doing so, turned to the Omaha commander and said that he always dismounted this way. Mr. President, Mr. Brezhnev, do you want the marks off or any hold? Well, now, we don't take questions of oppression photo opportunity here. Yes, I think he agreed that we'd meet. We will. We don't take questions of oppression. Right, thank you. Let's try that. $600 billion. Thus, we're not dealing with something that's an extension of historic precedent. We're dealing with a real crisis in a budget situation. And that's why the President, and thus he has endorsed a compromise measure that he's sent by the committee a billion dollars. We're able to install a lot of money at least in the right direction and have folks really bring things back into development. It's a responsible thing to do to fill that budget deficit. And the President has proposed a plan of about $40 or $50 million to hold the close. He's been compromised with the sector. I know you've all been sworn in and congratulations. I don't know why you've proudly kicked me for it. I've given you the job, but sit down, Mr. President. Good to see you. Hi. Nice to see you. From Illinois. Hey, just saw her on that last trip. Good morning. I know that I've seen all these others on our staff, but I can't just to make sure there's still who we're talking about. Good. Mr. President, Chair of the Commission. Yes, that's right. Pleased to see you. Oh, yes. Well, Mr. President, we've just been saying a few words about your contact. You were nice and early during the economy and fighting for federalism. We've just said a few words about it in five seconds. Let me just say a few words then. For whatever time I have left in here before someone drags me out, I'll have a little dialogue if possible. First of all, I want to thank you all for doing this. And it's so good to sit in here with contemporaries, even what he wants. Any given time. And Caesar had remarked, too, that comforts me very much. When he said that age was not for the elders correcting the mistakes of the young, the state would soon collapse. So I figured that's what we're here to do, is to say that. But I know there are many problems that are of concern and delighted to have the opportunity to have your counsel and advice on those matters. I look forward to working with you on it. I think there are a couple of points that have been so much demagoguery that, under the funny papers, I wouldn't look at the paper in the morning. If you haven't mentioned social security yet, which I know is a concern that many people out there have been, and I get frustrated that those people are demagogued and frightened people into thinking that maybe they're not going to get this benefit, which is what they're counting on. We know that the program is insolvent. We know it has to be repaired. But I have said it has got to be repaired and restructuring that does not take away from the people who are presently dependent on it. We can't pull a rug out from someone like that. We're not going to do it.