 This system is just not on a human scale. It's too big for individual human beings to have any kind of connection or agency. You know, honestly, I don't know what my representatives are doing. I don't really hold them accountable. Frankly, in the Assembly and the State Senate, I don't really are. I read the newspaper every day, and I didn't know who was representing them. And for that fact, I mean, something needs to change. They need to be held accountable for that same fact that me, Anthony Helena, who has no idea who represents them. We sized our Legislature 120 and 1879 when there were fewer than 700,000 people in California. I think it is really hard to have your voice heard when you're one of over 400,000 people being represented by a single person. Their ability to be able to touch the people, to connect with the people, to get on that personal level is impossible. You know, if you were a State Senator in California and you read two Twitter messages from every human being you represented, that would be like reading 25 copies of War and Peace. There is too many people being represented, so I do not feel that we are being represented correctly. We don't have such a thing as an urban Republican or a rural Democrat in California Legislature. They exist in the electorate, but they don't exist in the legislature. They don't listen to me, and I know that I've written, I've emailed, I've gone to meetings, and they say, uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh. And that's it, because it's not their point of view.