 If we were here, if we were here a mere six or seven years ago, no time at all, and somebody jumps up and says, you know, Bernie, this $7.25 an hour minimum wage is a starvation wage. I think we should raise it to, say, 15 bucks an hour. Now what would happen, the person next to it would say, $15 an hour, you're nuts. That's double the minimum wage. Nobody will go for that. You're too radical. You're crazy. You know what happened? Workers in the fast food industry, McDonald's and Burger King and Wendy's, they went out on strike and I had the honor of marching with them in Washington, D.C. And then the word got out and people began thinking about it and they say, yeah, these guys are right, $7.25, you can't make it. And then Seattle, $15, San Francisco, Los Angeles, $15, Oregon, $15, California, $15, California, $15. But the point is, what is the point to all of these reflections? It is, it is, it is that when people stand up and fight back, they change the reality. What was a crazy idea seven years ago of $15 an hour is now being passed by states and cities all over America and together we are going to pass it nationally.