 So we want to go local here to Philadelphia for a moment. Mayor Kenny recently introduced a plan to provide universal preschool to all four-year-olds in Philadelphia. We think that's a great idea. It's a great idea, isn't it? We want our kids to start school earlier and get the education that they need. But to pay for this, he wants to put a tax on soda that would disproportionately affect low-income and middle-class Philadelphians. What are your thoughts on this? And does this sound like a moral issue to you? Well, here's what it sounds like. I absolutely agree with the mayor that we need a revolution, as I mentioned earlier, in childcare and pre-pre-care. Too many kids are in inadequate childcare centers where the instructors don't have the training or the background to provide the quality care those kids need. No argument. I would go further than the mayor. I think this is a right, not just for four-year-olds, but for all of our children. But I do have a serious disagreement with how you fund this. When you have massive income and wealth inequality, when 58% of all new income generated today is going to the top 1%, you don't have to fund childcare on the backs of the poorest people in this city. That's a regressive way to raise funds. Now, I also know, and I'm not going to argue with anybody, we have an obesity problem in this country. I don't want kids getting hooked up on sugar. I agree with that as well. So let us deal with that issue. Let's get kids off of sugar. Let's make sure that we have the best childcare system in the world in America. And I will fight for that as president, but you don't do it through regressive taxation. He was talking about, you know, you get a 12-ounce bottle of soda that's like 30 or 40 cents tax on that bottle of soda. That's five bottles, you know, a bottle a day, that's, you know, two bucks a week for a low-income family. That's a lot of money. That's a lot of money. So again, the goal is the right goal, but the method and the approach and the raising funds is the wrong way to do it, in my view. Thank you, Senator Sanders.