 We are joined by a special guest. So before we get to the moderated panel, I'd like to, I can't really see him from here, but we're joined by Representative Emmanuel Cleaver, who represents the great people of the Fifth District of Missouri. Representative Cleaver has to get to a committee hearing, but happy to welcome you at the lectern if you'd like to say a few words, sir. Thank you. Good morning. Let me just say this quickly. I think, I don't know what your theology of life is, but what you are doing is God's work. However you see God, whether you see God as a Super Bowl champion or something like the chiefs, the Kansas chiefs, but it is very seriously. When you think about the fact that this is the hottest year on record, at least since we have inhabited the planet with the ability to measure and you look at the things that are happening all around the nation, including floods in Southern California, it would tell just about anyone with an IQ at room temperature that something has gone awry, that something has happened to this planet. I happen to believe that it is still reversible, and obviously you do too, or you wouldn't be here. It is reversible. The earth has amazing healing ability, but we can't continue to do what we've been doing. I will probably, there'll probably a lynch mob after me before the summer is over, because I'm proposing that we restrict traffic on one of the main arteries going through Kansas City, Missouri. In 10 years, we'll start now. The average car is kept by Americans for eight years, and so it gives people an opportunity to make decisions on what they want in the community. But I think we can do all kinds of things, little bitty things that will change the direction that we're headed. I appreciate what you're doing. I appreciate the opportunity to come by and just say that you are the leaders of the planet right now, and we need you to continue. Change has almost always been brought about by young people. I mean, you have very few old folk with liniment rubbing on their shoulders and so forth making changes. You go back in history, and it's always young people making the change. And so when I leave, there'll be still young people here, and you are the future. You got to make the change. You got to very easily and quietly nudge old people out of the way, who's thinking is in 1920s. So thank you, Kansas Chiefs.