 Thanks for coming down on this Saturday. Jay, my pleasure. This is an amazing Saturday, and I want to get together with you on what happened today and what it means, what it means in terms of the city, what it means in terms of the state, what it means in terms of each of us, and our way of looking at it going forward. So you're especially qualified. Tell me why. So, well, I don't know if I'm that specially qualified, but I can tell you that I did have exposure to it when I was with the Hanuman administration. One of the things that I was in charge of besides IT was public safety oversight for communications. And as part of that, we brought in things like interoperable radio systems, because remember back in those days, remember 9-11? Fire couldn't talk to police, couldn't talk to ambulance. Hawaii was the same then, or Honolulu was the same then. We brought in a single radio system. We brought in wireless enhanced 911, where I could dial 911 from mobile phone. And a first responder would know where I am and they could send the ambulance there, or the fire truck or whatever, or the police officer. Any first responder, we did that. We started using social media. Remember when the entire island went down because of the electric outage? We were using Twitter. We were tracking what was going on using Twitter before anyone was even looking at social media and Twitter fees to communicate with what was going on within the islands. So as part of that, I got to be part of the Department of Emergency Management. I sat in a number of meetings and so on. As we were going through the state and the city, we were going through a number of changes that were going to be made to make our Department of Emergency Management better. It used to be called Civil Defense back in the older days. So I've had some exposure with that. So I'm assuming you're bringing me in because, okay, based on that... Well, you have a series of disaster communications. That's what we have this morning. That's what we had. So what happened as far as your concern? So I'm sitting, going to make coffee this morning. The alarm goes off. And typically, because we're doing tests and so on, I just went, oh, I didn't realize this was Tuesday. It was Tuesday the month. Right? Okay, let's go check. Oh, it is. And then I looked and I said, okay, emergency, but it didn't say this is a drill. This is a test. It said this is not a drill. And so I'm like, wait, wait, you don't say not. Usually you say this is a drill and then such and such. You don't say this is not a test. So that kind of didn't read right to me. And then I couldn't hear any sirens. And actually you turn on radio, KSSK is one of the local radio stations that's identified as where you get your news, they still weren't doing anything. And I turned on the television and when I turned the television on, there was a broadcast that came across the television that said, this is not a drill. And so I said, okay, we're missing a number of parts, but we got two pieces that seem to say that there's something amiss. I still wasn't, I still kept making coffee. I still, it didn't feel right. It just didn't feel right. There was too many other things that need to go along with it. But who would know? I was at my computer actually working on something for Think Tech and my phone was right there and it beeped and I looked at the thing and I said, my God, Verizon couldn't be kidding me. This has got to be serious. This is it. This is the big moment because I always joke about, if you saw a bright flash over the western side of Oahu, would you be surprised? A lot of people say, no, I wouldn't be surprised. After all, we have all this bish bash going on between Trump and Kim Jong-un. So maybe he's doing something. And now this is sort of a realization of that joke. The joke becomes the reality. So I said to my wife, Sharon, we got to get down to a safer place in the house. We got to get away from the windows. There's a ballistic missile incoming. It's the end of everything. Let's go down and find a safe place. A lot of people were panicking. And she was very, she was terrific. I tell you, in terms of our systems, our systems to the extent that they could work, work, what can we do? We did the right thing. We got into a safe place within the house. And I'm thinking, we live in between mountains. Maybe the mountains would protect us from the initial blast. So we thought about this before. And so we were there and I had my phone with me and I called my brother in Washington. I said, Gene, what have you heard about this? Because surely this would be national, international news. By this time, it's around 8.12, 8.15 this morning. And he said, you know what? Sounds like fake news to me. So I was doing the same thing. I was looking, I got onto the web and started looking at the other.