 So here we are outside the Committee on Foreign Affairs in the Congress and they have been having hearings on Iran in this committee. I also just came to the committee hearing in Homeland Security on Iran and it's really interesting because on the one hand we have the vote this week in the war powers resolution where the majority, almost all of the Democrats and a couple of the Republicans joined in to say the President has no authorization for war with Iran and that passed in the House and that will be going to the Senate soon. So we do have to contact our senators and say hope for that. And you also have on the positive side the presidential debates last night where the candidates were all saying we didn't want to go into war with Iran, the Iran nuclear deal was a good thing, of course someone more forceful than others, but you know the general sentiment among all of the candidates that we've got to stop this march of war. On the other hand, when you go to these hearings you see so much Iran bashing from definitely from the Republican side but also from a lot of people in the Democratic side and it's very disinteresting. So there's weird dynamics going on and I think this means that we have to really be pushing from the ground up. So one thing January 25th is an international day of action against war with Iran, against sanctions on Iran and against the US troops in the region. But there's another thing that we can do and that is we can send an apology to the people of Iran. Why to the people of Iran? Because when Donald Trump pulled out of Iran with the deal, he just put on an ideal. He imposed these draconian sanctions that say to the entire world you will not do business with Iran. Iran will not sell any of its oil on the international market. And they are just choking the people of Iran, destroying the Iranian economy. And these are people of nothing to do with the political scene. We're talking about 80 million people. It's a very, very large country. And they're having a difficult time. The price of food is skyrocketing. Medicines are hard to find. And the US is doing that on purpose because they want people to go out in the streets and then they want the Iranian government to crack down on those people and then they want to go back and save them. Look how impressive this Iranian regime is. They want chaos. They want Iran to be like, you know, Iraq for the last 20 years or Afghanistan for the last 20 years. Just chaos. And that Iranian people don't want that, whether they like their government or hate their government. They don't want to live in a state of chaos like has been happening in so many different countries around a good congresswoman. Hi. Thank you for being so wonderful. There are some good ones. She's a man and then she's a very rich and peony. But no, the policy of the administration is to create chaos in Iran. And so we want to apologize to Iranian people for this devastating policy, this horrible policy. I mean, look what we've done. This pregates Trump. It's been since the Bush administration. It was continued during the Obama administration, except they signed the nuclear deal and things are going well. And in fact, human security, hearing I was at today, one of the witnesses said, well, you know, they have a lot of cyber attacks and they might be a big cyber attack that could be devastating for the U.S. But we've seen that when the Iran nuclear deal was signed, he said the cyber attacks almost disappeared. So, of course, they talked about how are we going to protect the American people. And they said, we've got to get more money on human security. We've got to visit this and this to secure ourselves. And here I am saying, how come they're just not saying we have to rejoin Iran nuclear deal? We have to make sure we don't go to war with Iran. We have to lift the economic sanctions that are courting them so much. But, you know, that wasn't what they talked about. They talked about the sleeper cells of Iran inside the United States. They really tried to make people feel very afraid about the Iran attacks. But really, it's Iran that has been attacked time and again. So, one thing we want to do is have this apology letter to the people of Iran. We wrote a very beautiful letter. It was a short version and a long version. I would really love you to go and read it and then to sign it and then to pass it around. And you can get to that letter by going to codepink.org backslash letter to Iran. We want to get many, many thousands of signatures on that letter. We're up to about 7,000. We need more than that. And then we have a very creative way, I won't tell you right now, but I'm disseminating that inside Iran, where many millions of people will see it. We're also going to take it in a beautiful art version of it to the Iranian intersection here in Washington, DC. That's kind of like the equivalent of what the Iran embassy would be if we had an embassy. So, please, go to the codepink.org website, sign the apology, and get as many of your friends to sign it as well. Let's stop this morning code.