 Oh, he's not late at all. He can't be late for us. This is the historical group, Mr. President. No French wanker. We have a mutual friend in Davenport, the Palmers. Oh, for heaven's sake, yes. Dave and BJ, my former employers, right? And you and I had lunch together with Ralph Evans once in Des Moines. Yes. Where's Des Moines? Yeah. Yes. All gone too bad, I know. Mr. President, this is what we want to present to you. It is the 250th anniversary of George Washington course. And on the back of this particular medal is the Great Seal of the United States. This is the 200th anniversary of Davenport. And so the medal commemorates both anniversaries. We thought it was appropriate that you get the first one that was minted. And we're very pleased to be able to present it to you. I'm very proud and happy to have that. I wasn't so happy about his birthday at midnight last night when they started the fireworks just after I'd been asleep for about an hour. I hadn't anticipated that, but you know that. I don't believe they could tell to George about that. Why did they wait to midnight? I don't know. But incidentally, that seal there, you know, well, the whole seal was designed by an Irishman named Thompson. That's right. And there's quite an explanation of the meaning of all of those symbols in there. Mr. President, when you can't sleep tonight, here's something to read that will tell you all about the. OK. I'm afraid this is just the beginning. Well, I thank you very much. We also want to present to you this publication, We the People, that's our principal publication of the United States Capitalist Art Society. And we have printed five million of these books. We have 4,600,000 sold, and we have 400,000 to sell this year. Cases like another. But this is how we finance the work of this nonprofit society. Well, the Library of Congress tells us that that's the largest number of history books sold and single history books in all of time. Well, unless you consider the Bible of history books also, but it has some other. You know those, you know that, lady? Oh, I sure do. And E.J., that we wrote the text with this record. And she would be thrilled to have given it to her. Oh, I feel right to her, yes. We've got to go, Mr. President. You're under great pressure at the time. Thank you so much for receiving us and for letting us present these things. Thank you very much. Well, thank you. Nice to see you again. Thank you, Mr. President. I'm sure you've got a good one done today, too. You didn't entertain. Yes, that's the regular discussion. I have a lot of fun with this thing. It's a concentration. Oh, for heaven's sakes, me and my cartoons. Well, your cartoons are great, sir. Those are doodles. That's not a doodle. I'll mention one more. OK. Especially this is Commander Donald Russell. Yes, sir, hello. Nice to see you. Nice to see you. Mr. President. Can you please visit Jelly Flash, nice to see you, Commander. Morgan Luebler, executive manager there. I do, Mr. President. What do you mean? Mr. President, how are you doing? I'm with our program director, also, after our newspaper. I think these gentlemen will probably like that. If you all get in here closer, maybe I ought to get in the middle of the meeting. That's great. Then we can write to you. Well, I'm most grateful to you. I know that I was supposed to be on hand some months ago. And the funny thing happened to me. But I am grateful, and very honored by this, that I am also honored and grateful for all the support and help that your organization has given to us and some other things, including the defense. We've just been having a meeting with some members of Congress. And we just haven't done a job that they're explaining to the people the need. They don't realize the desperate situation that we're in. And I've recently had a briefing, which was the most, I told Nancy on upstairs, the most sobering thing that's happened to me since I've been here. The opposition, the sophistication of their program is one of the quantity of it. And anyone that would see that would, I think, be moving forward to increase the defense. We're going to stay with it. We'll appreciate having you, sir. Thank you very much. I'm going to speak for the rest of the panel. I'm not going to comment on the states. And we just present this to you as soon as possible. In the future, we can take pictures of you. Thank you very much. This is the problem in the South, which you were up in. Grant Reppel did the dedication. And unfortunately, Sam will just stand right beside me when it comes to dealing with these punishments. Well, I certainly will have more to it. So happy to be a member of our organization. Yes. California. Yeah, I'm not just a member of the California. It's California Golden Bear. And I love my home. Well, thank you very much. I'm very proud to have this. I appreciate it very much. Members, I can rest assured of our continued support. Thank you. Thank you very much. This is my welcome. Rest assured. Thank you, Sam. Thank you. I see you go over and go upstairs. You've been inducted into the Emo-Verban Society? The Cubs? Yes. Yes, I'll have you. You know the rules, though. You cannot decline. Adrian, I'm sure that they like this all the way. In fact, I know what gets me the most is this talk that started even before it went into effect. But even now, a few months later, to say as if, well, the program has been tried and failed. I've got to do 83, 84, and 85, but nothing that's being proposed is responsive to a recession. And they pretend it is. I don't see what they're talking about. I happen to believe we're undertaxed. I don't think we can. I know you do. I told these fellas this morning, I reminded them. George, all over the country in the campaign, I get, and I always, as you know, like to do Q&A with an audience when I'm campaigning. Inevitably, I'd get a question. Well, if you come to a choice between the defense buildup that you want and balancing the budget, and you can't handle, which will you do? And I said, national defense. I said, that has to be the first priority. And every time I ever said it, I got a storm of applause. People agreed. 1972, when I was working in the Senate for a public court, now I'd have come right up. And people would ask me, who are you for, for president? I said, I was for Scoop Jackson. And they said, well, he's a liberal Democrat who will ruin the economy. And I said, they'll all ruin the economy. But Scoop is right out the Russians. And Scoop, I always had one line that he used, when people said we can't afford it, because we need a more welfare spending. He said, my parents came from Norway. And Norway had the finest welfare state in Europe when the Nazis marched in. Didn't do many good. And it was a very telling line. Yeah. Yeah. Well, nice to see you. That's your floor, of course, you know how. And this is that it? It's time to meet you. Please, to meet you. President, are you there? Well, come in. Thank you. Thank you. Hello. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. Hello. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you. Hello. Nice to meet you. Good evening. We're greatly honored that Mr. Woodson trusted his friend here to discuss the problems that we face. Thank you very much, Mr. President. First of all, I would like to thank you for taking this time out of your business schedule of the meeting with us. And furthermore, Mr. Suzuki, as on top of the message, as mentioned, asked me to convey his wish that he schedule in June in Paris. Maybe to arrange a request that, okay, good, good, all right. Better than missing? What's missing? What's missing? That's a new movie that's out. Oh, a meeting. She says it's one hour in length and better than missing. It's supposed to be a story. I guess that's another film. Oh, yes. Oh, yeah. That was the film based on a trillion. That's right. Sure. Yeah. Good, good, good. That's nice. That's good. I didn't hear the rhythm of the game there. There's only one topic on the agenda today, Mr. President. It's agricultural export policy. And I think the reason for the information we get in the country is that a lot of us travel through the country in a certain way. We talk with other countries, such as this morning, inside business with the representatives of Japan. And recently, we've been in Mexico, and there's a continued assertion that the United States is not considered internationally as a reliable supplier of agricultural products. Thank you very much.