 I still remember the first time I drove to the Foundation for Economic Education. I was with my buddy Carl. We drove all the way across the state of Pennsylvania. We didn't know what we were going to find when we got there. But what we discovered was a community of classical liberal ideas. We discovered Hayek and Bastiat and Mises and Albert J. Nock. We discovered communicators like Leonard Reed and Henry Haslett. But we also discovered a community, a thriving community of people that believed in ideas. And for me, that was the most important part of FI in my development as someone that fights for liberty every day. Of course today, the community for liberty is tenfold bigger than we could have imagined when I was 19 years old at my first FI seminar. Now we have social media. Now we have Facebook. Now we have an ability to talk to every student across the globe about these same ideas and the same people that turned me on to liberty when I was a kid. The Foundation for Economic Education is a key part of translating those ideas into a message that connects with people. A key part of bringing that community together through FICon. I'm proud to be an alumni of the Foundation for Economic Education. And I can't wait to see what they do next.