 On the other hand, whether they believe it or not, just the two men sitting together would have more effect than anybody else because these intermediaries are not going to be very good in this situation. I'm going to be back Monday, so you all talk to him before then. He's away, and he's not talking from the range, and he's trying to recuperate. But I've talked to the better people here who know him and know it very well. They say that his last conversation with Megan Hoover and Hoover took the offensive and sounded like civil liberties lawyers. He did not want any such authority. He never had one that the Attorney General was giving the time that he had tried to carry it out. And back in February right after the new administration came in, they set up an organized crime thing and started going after, sent out instructions to all the tax officers to use electronic equipment and that the Attorney General would designate the man that they wanted. And he, Hoover, didn't believe in that, didn't want it. So the President just said, well, if you don't want it, by God, don't do it, and I don't want to catch you doing it. He's the case unless the Attorney General personally signs it. And that's where the President feels, and he hadn't talked to Hoover about it since. And Hoover hadn't consulted him since. The President would like to see it stopped as much as he would in your judgment, and he would do anything, and he could to just ease the pain if it didn't create more pain. But he's dealing with fire with this fella and the only man that could do it, probably, and I'll see you next week.