 Hello, Michael Marx. Hello, Darren. Good afternoon. This is Reagan. Newsweek shares your concern about drug use and the threat that it presents to our future. Our editors have made a major commitment to the readers of Newsweek to provide detailed reports on this crisis. And in cooperation with McDonald's, we have prepared a special report to help inform high school students, their families, and teachers. Beginning next week, Newsweek on the Drug Crisis will be distributed to the more than 3,000 high schools participating in our school education program. And it's my pleasure presenting the first issue. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you. This is Reagan on behalf of the employees at McDonald's in Newsweek and all the folks that eat at McDonald's. We'd like to thank you personally for having the courage to step out front and helping forward this partnership between the private sector and the citizens to solve this problem and attack so viciously the great resource in our young people. So on behalf of McDonald's, Newsweek would like to give you this and say thank you for showing you what. Thank you. Oh my. Thank you very much. Thank you. I, that man looks familiar. Yeah. Good luck. Thank you very much. Thank you. I'm very grateful to you. And I'm sure that there are lots of young people and parents and lots of us. Very grateful to you. I just think it shows what the private sector can do if they want to. And we certainly all have a responsibility to solve the problem. Yes. Yes. And we're dealing with young people and the next generation and we don't do something. But we are doing something. We are indeed. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very, very much. Thank you. Wow. Yeah. Pardon me? Here is me. Here is them. There are a lot of people to say that the cutbacks in the drug budget and the drug budget are signed and produced in the drug budget. Doesn't that concern you? No, I think there's a misunderstanding about that. I don't think there have been cutbacks in the drug program. I think there were initial, last year there were, there was a lot of money given to the drug program to put in planes and so on. But you don't do that, it's a year. Planes fly longer than a year. So I think that's a little misunderstood. However, I don't think that that has anything to do with people trying to get to young people and trying to talk them out of going on to drugs, educating people, getting them aware. I don't think that's anything to do with it. Say that it were true, which it isn't, but I don't think it's anything to do with it. Well, you're saying that that's not a federal rule to facilitate this. I don't think it's destroying money into something. It's going to solve a problem. I never have thought so. I think that AA has done a marvelous job without any federal money. I believe, as I've always believed, that education and awareness is where you're answered, it's going to be alive. Now that may take a long time, but that's ultimately where it's going to come down in my opinion. I'm sorry, how's your husband feeling these days? We haven't seen him. I was waiting for somebody to answer that. He feels fine. And he's coming along fine. And as all of you said on television many times, I saw you all, it's a five to six week period where you take things slowly and he is, and he's coming along just fine. Do you have a rhenium in at all? Is he a little bit too anxious to head back to the school? Oh sure, of course. Yeah. I told him, he really is getting a bargain because he's getting the daughter of a doctor and ex-nurse's aide and a real nurse. He's really saving a lot of money. You want to talk about a rhenium? We haven't seen the president in so long. Oh no, well, I won't, but that shouldn't surprise you. I don't know why that happens. We just have a lot of questions. Yeah, I'm sure you do. What's the answer, is he? Is he getting some of the answers with all the meetings he's having? We know it's not the schedule or a lot of meetings, but his advisor, Mr. Hampshire, his Wallace and the others. Is he now getting some of the answers you said last month he wasn't getting? I don't think he can get the answers until all the committee reports are in. And he believes that the best way and the most responsible way is to wait for those committees to put forward their reports and then say what he has to say. And he has, other than what he has said already, that he knew nothing about any diversion of funds, he knew nothing about any Swiss bank accounts, anything of the kind. But other than that, the most responsible way is to let these reports come forward. This is right in the congressional report, Henry Allen, in August or September, he's saying the president is going to state his version of events and answer the questions that we have for him until those come out in the fall. Where did you get that, Chris? It's not gonna be until August. You know something I don't know. Well, that's the date that the Senate Committee has until August and I think the House Committee has until October. I don't know that that's when it is. I'm sure you won't wait till that long, no. So that's why I guess I'm trying to say I'm trying to say I'm trying to say what kind of a committee is he to go on for months? What kind of a committee is he to go on for months? I do have to ask him that, you know. He's waiting for the Tower Report to come in. He's waiting for Absurd. He just wants more input, which is, I believe, the responsible way to do it. Sometimes, you know, it's harder to sit here and say nothing when you really want to say something. Does he really want to say things and answer some of the questions people have? Of course he does. Is he frustrated by the information that's coming up? Is he frustrated by the information that's coming up? Frustrated by it? Yeah. Peace meal nature of the year. Oh, yes, yes. He'd like it all out. He said that in the very beginning. President, I don't understand one thing. The questions we have have to do with his involvement or what he knew. Why does he have to wait for outside committees to report before he says what he knew or what he you offer us? Because he thinks that's a responsible way to do it, Chris. Obviously, the questions are not going to just end with his involvement as they have not just ended with drug involvement here, right? So he thinks that's a responsible way to do it. I think so too. Now, that's sometimes very difficult. Sometimes it's harder to say nothing than to say something. Thank you, everyone. Thank you. Thank you. And thank you. Thank you. Thank you.