 Former FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler said, quote, let me be clear, the FCC will not impose utility style regulation and specified, quote, that means no rate regulation, no filing of tariffs, and no network unbundling. Mr. Lewis, according to the most recent FCC communications marketplace report, prices for the most popular broadband plans have fallen by 20% since former chairman Wheeler made that decision not to rate regulate in 2015 at the same time, those plans now average 16% faster speeds. Do you think former chairman Wheeler was wrong to refrain from imposing rate regulation on broadband providers? No, I think that would be very bad. Oh, actually I was asking Mr. Lewis this time, so I'm gonna let you go, Mr. Ford. Thank you, congresswoman. I was grateful that Chairman Wheeler enacted strong neutrality rules, and I think as a compromise, he did not enact any sort of rate regulation, but I don't believe that means that the FCC should not be a cop on the beat in looking at the broadband marketplace. And right now it doesn't have the authority to actually look at the broadband marketplace and see what people are actually paying. So we've had traditionally in this country options for telecom utilities where either we have a monopoly system or we have competition. I'm trying to get us towards competition, but if we have monopoly pricing or few choices for consumers and localities like we're seeing, then that can lead to prices continuing to go up well ahead of inflation.