 Let me lay out a set of contrasting alternatives. On the one hand, if we can spend $8,000 per year, we can provide really high-quality early childhood education for our children. If we don't do that and they don't get the start they need, chances are they're not going to do well in school and that's going to lead to a problem with crime which has its own cost to society. But if they are caught after committing a crime, the cost of incarceration is $34,000 or $35,000 a year or even higher in some cases. So there's a real contrast between $30,000 to $40,000 and expense incarceration and all the other losses that society has from not having a productive use of the citizen and $8,000 per year in actually doing a good job in early childhood education. It's a really smart investment. It's why Republicans and Democrats, conservatives and liberals really believe in early childhood investment and that's why I've made such a big push of making it part of my budget.