 The only one I've got that I can't see right now is the one that has already gone into the air. I know. I appreciate that. All right. Mr. President, how are you? You just left home to come here. I'm glad you're here. I'm glad you're here. Mr. President, it's great to see you. You're looking great. We're going to do everything we can to make this program work. Thank you. Mr. President, thank you so much for all your support. Thank you very much. We're going to be in your help when this budget comes in. Thank you. Good morning, Mr. President. Good morning, Mr. President. Good morning. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Good morning. Good morning. And thanks for the meeting. Good morning! Mr. President, good morning! Mr. President, good morning! Thank you very much. Good morning! Good morning! Good morning! Good morning! Thank you so much. Some people don't have much budget, so that's right. So we have to be the best thing for television, but it's good. Everybody look this way, please. Thank you. We really give you a high five. Okay, just a half a year. I was happy to take three of those. Thank you, sir. Participate and answer that one. They first started talking about the balance of budget. Even when you were talking about it, I think they agreed with it at that point. I haven't grown to be talking about the balance of budget about somebody forcing them to do it. After my gig at Brian and the Chamber of Commerce when the President was a conservative president, we've had an White House in years when we got a Senate Republican control with conservative. We got bullwiggles in the house, and we ended up with $100 million. That's the longest time we did something about it. Well, you know, in all fairness, I have to say from our experience in California, because when I became governor there, we were in about the same shape the federal situation is. And yet there we have the balance budget amendment. And they've been a little finagling with the books to make it appear to get banned by the election under the previous administration without having to raise taxes. And so it fell to us when we got there. But I learned one wonderful thing about it. In all due difference to the Congress and what they're up against. When, you know, most of the causes are worthwhile, somebody comes in with this and the pressure mounts. And it's pretty difficult for them to say no. Well, in the period having the amendment. And when you had no money at all because of this, you'd be surprised and don't remember how easy it was to say to the pressure loop the greatest answer in the work was to say, hey, look, there just is no money. And they didn't have an answer to that. And the first time that we came up with a surplus was the time when a blessing cap came to me with our financier who had wine burger and said, we're going to have a surplus. We're going to have a surplus. And it was very good about the second year. And he said, I thought maybe before everybody else finds out you may have one of those things we've been saying, no, there's a favor that I'd like to get in the link. But I think the Lord was with me because I said to him, I do have a favorite. Let's give the surplus back. We made the announcement. We were going to give it back for anyone else found out about it. And that's what we did with it. But listen, thanks to all of you for what you're doing. And I know you're going over there. The East room and all the air conditioning is working as well. And have some briefing on this. But today we make a big announcement out there in the steps of the Capitol named the announcement. We're several thousand people and with all the co-sponsors and everything on the steps with us. And I feel the public is with us on it. And last night, I mean to get partisan here, but last night I saw a few lines from the press. Senator Cranston and Senator Hatch have been in a kind of debate with me and a couple of lines. And I saw our old friend from California, Senator Cranston saying what a ridiculous and foolish thing this was and then charging that you and I was presiding with the biggest deficit in history. And so how foolish of what nobody asked of us. Well, you know, Senator Cranston has to be one of a little exclusive group of a half a dozen senators who between them have been the biggest spenders in the history of the United States in their advocacy and their promotion and their backing of spending measures. So I think we can say there's a certain amount of inheritance in this movement. I said, that's fair. I said, Cranston's against an F4. We're to save on that. This is the next person. I think one of their additional things, there's a spending limitation in them as well. And I think that that's even more important than the balance budget because I'm nothing throwing about the budget being balanced at one-and-a-half trillion dollars. You're right. So the spending limitation is further. Yes. I remember the tax bad boy of economics who won the Nobel Prize once said about the balance budget. He said, I would rather have an unbalanced 200 billion dollar budget than a balanced 400 billion dollar budget. But the thing, all this talk and this propaganda that it's a gimmick and that it won't work, how do they explain that over 40 states have it in their constitutions and works in those 40 states? California, the experts come in in advance and predict what the revenues were going to be and you submit a budget within those revenues or submit a request for more revenues at the same time. You know, the surplus, after you've left, we had a surplus. And unfortunately, the most dangerous thing in the world is the gift group of politicians, the surplus. And we rose to the occasion and we spent that surplus. So this year was the first time it went. And politicians will always rise to whatever level the money is available. Well, you know, that's a wonderful example because the year before, the last year, in which we still had control of the budget, the surplus was $850 million. And my favorite story is of the Democratic senator who stormed into my office one day because we gave that back. And he stormed into my office and said, that money back is an unnecessary expenditure. But last year, we had a $5 billion budget. But just like in Washington, the new administration comes in in the middle of the fiscal year. So there wasn't anything we could do about that one. We knew that the halfway mark that we left office, that we were leaving a $500 billion, million dollar. See, I've only been here a little while. But $500 million surplus. And it was just there it was. The new administration came in. Young Brown, they had the $500 million. It's long gone. And now they're faced with a tremendous deficit. And they've got a constitution that says they have to balance that. Which was an exciting course this year. But the first timer, but it's less than the previous year. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. Appreciate it. Thank you very much.