 And that was a fantastic framing, and let me pick up if I could. The framing was actually not fantastic. Right now the two real security threats to the world are nuclear war and the climate crisis. And unfortunately, Congressman, the way that both the Democrats and Republicans have been pushing us in this war in Ukraine where we definitely condemn Russia, but we need negotiations. If we keep pouring billions of millions of dollars into this war, we're taking us to the brink of a nuclear war. Let's listen to the chair of the Joint Chief of Staff, Mark Milley, who said, seize the moment, go for negotiations. Raise your hand here if you'd like to see negotiations instead of a nuclear war. None of you? Come on, there's gotta be something. Actually, I'll take that as the first question, because I think it's a good point to get the mask on. I was asking the audience that actually, but I know, and Michael, I know you're a big cheerleader for the Iraq war and for other wars, so you don't really have a lot of legitimacy when it comes to using diplomacy, not war. But I think let's just put it in the context. So you don't want to hear any sort of discussion, you just want to talk. I just want to end my point here, which is to say that it's a shame that 30 Democrats who signed a letter to Biden calling for negotiations were so pilloried by people like you in the Democratic Party. I didn't pillorize them at all. If they withdrew their letter after 24 hours, the Democrats have to get back on board of calling for negotiations and not leave that to the extreme right of the Republican Party like Marjorie Taylor Greene. They shouldn't be the ones with the rational voice in all of this calling for negotiations. Democrats have to step forward, have to put the pressure on the Biden administration and say we need negotiations, not more war. The real security, the national security is addressing the climate crisis, getting people housed and not focusing on weapons. What?