 Good morning. Good morning. Good morning. Good morning. Good morning. We're in Bob Marver. Great pot. Yeah, great. Have a good one. Have you met bill? Oh yeah, hello Jim. How are ya? Hi Jim, good to see you. Bob Marver. I appreciate your willingness to give us a few minutes of your time. That means a lot to everybody in Oklahoma. I want to make sure you know all the players. Start with Bob Parker. Parker drilling company is the largest independent, well, large drilling company in the world, isn't it, Bob? Yes, sir. So he's a big driller. Doug Cummins, he says he's a small producer, but really he's an independent producer, an Oklahoma medium-sized producer. Jack Graves is the president of the Oklahoma Independent Producers Association. And Ray Potts is another medium-sized producer in Oklahoma, also past president of the Oklahoma Independent Producers Association. They have some idea of how the proposal would affect. And again, I would like to see you again. Good to see you, Jack. Thank you. You recall I was here along with a couple other governors that asked you. That's right. Yes. You talk about the same subject. Actually, I'm the department director. So you're Thomas Miller, the president of the White Patron Association. Mr. President, how do you do, sir? How do you do? What do you mean, sir? I lost my voice. I was the first at the air conditioning meeting. I am a registered Republican. I shoot. Thank you. Thank you. The president is the next one. Skip Sharpe. He's the former president. I'm going to meet you. If someone writes you a letter about your hearing aids, I answer them. Mr. President, Ron Miller, who is the former vice president of the White Patron Association, from Sacramento. Well, sir, it's still the same place. Mike has it back. There's Albert Dabber, I'm the deputy president. Mr. President, could we get a group photo here? Yes. Next to the president. Skip. Come on up here. Put them on the other side. Thank you, sir. Thank you. Appreciate it. Forty years ago. I appreciate it. I want to thank you for your kind letter this morning to Doug yet. We should have appreciated it. It was quite an honor. I'm only taught by this. Please to do it. That's his little dessert. I have a Tennessee fob. I never thought I'd get this fob. Well, I had to go to Los Angeles to get up in the world. In Tennessee, I can ask him. I'm still trying to find out is there a place called Plum Tree in Tennessee? People have to ask my new parents. I happen to be a fan of Robert W. He's a former Thank you, sir. I appreciate it very much. I know that even if we had to be in our veterans here to make you an honor or a very brief story, we had Les Higa, who was a listed man from Hawaii, and he said afterwards, reception here and let our people stay longer is normal, but less later in the evening, so when I first got back from the meeting, I'm answering difference. If somebody would have told me that the President of the United States, Ronald Reagan, would have welcomed me, that the White House, 10 years later, would have welcomed me. Now we know that the voice of Waco is also the loudest, and now he's been hitting your communications people for an afternoon. That's a one request. That will be one. You should kind of hold some of the schedule down on the desk. Thank you, sir. You're a great man. You're a great leader. I'm pleased to have served you. I'm pleased to have had you. Thank you. The President of the United States. No, but, of course, I'm going to call on the Administrator, Dr. Francois Taylor, the President of the United States. I'm going to call on this one. Jack Long, the President of the Administrator. I'm going to call on you, sir. Thank you, sir. Thank you very much. Thank you for the opportunity. The President of the United States of recognition of the contributions to the goals of this Association and continued support to launch the legislation. You should have that, and I do those, too.