 Now, then there were January of 1981, but there are also 5,700,000 more withdrawals than there were in January of 1981. How then is the unemployment rate exactly what it was in January of 1981? 7.4. The $350,000 versus $5,700,000. There's the labor force, brother. Yeah, the labor force increase. Yes, but I don't think that's how it is. I don't find that it's the residual of the interaction of 2,800,000. And so it gives you, I don't know, I guess $5,700,000. I have to send you to clarify what you're doing. Because it's the labor force increasing by over 6 million. Look at this, brother. Take 100 as the base in 1980, 100 million is employable. And 7% of that would be 7 million, right? If that's 7 million unemployed, I don't know the workforce of 100 million. Now the workforce moves up to 106. What's 7% of 106? 7 million, 365. So the 365 went up. But the 7% stayed exactly the same. Well then maybe I would look up simply, maybe 300,000. I didn't stop to figure out what is 305,000. That would be 7,000. It's a whole lot better economy. That's what we're doing. One of the real advantages of what you made, mainly, you're in Nigeria when you're adding 300,000 a month to the employer. You're also picking up all of the new interest into the labor force. Yes, I know. That's it. We've been able to keep up with growth. So if anybody is sitting here with a pocket, the interest is 3,000, 7,000, 7.4%. I know she's definitely going up to the last 24 hours. That's how it worked out. Okay. Well, on with the agenda. Ladies and gentlemen, before we get started, we had a discussion for a couple of breakfasts this morning. I didn't have to bring up the right amount of what you wanted. What role did you take? It's good to see you. It's good to be here. Mr. President, I brought you all to Resolutions. We're at our convention. Any questions? Appreciate it. Well, thank you very much. I'm very pleased to have this. Thank you. Thank you to meet my aid. This leader wanted to call you there to replace you. You know, Mr. Alvarez from the Veterans' Congress, I want you to know that these people over there have been just great. Millio Karney, back in breakfast. Congratulations on your real life. Well, I thank you very much. Thank you. Mr. Alvarez will also turn topełn Your veterans on what American region for our conference. Could you have a picture of the group just from the American? Yeah, the marriage group. Can you stand in the middle? Oh, right. Right now. Thank you, Mr. President. We these them. I sure do. My name's Mary. Nice to meet you. Nice to meet you, too. Yes. Thanks very much. Steve, why don't you introduce our guest here? This is Peter Wang. Yes, this is Peter Wang. We've got a great honor as a beverage. We can present to the people who are having a drink of the king, Father Bebe. Nice to meet you. I'm from New York. I didn't realize I was playing that music. Sure. So, oh, this is for the first day. Oh, all right. Well, I will thank you, and I know she'll be very pleased. And I thank you for this. It's wonderful. This is the largest Chinese language newspaper in the world, that's right. And their father and mother, I guess, live in Taiwan. We had a lot of meetings that day. And they had one question there that we think will turn the American around. Because as a free world, we are coming in ways of understanding leadership. We feel our future for our children, especially by the statement you made. We feel that we are a free world. That's the best system we'll have in mankind. So far, we can really build up confidence, not only to the free world. Hope God will bless you and help you. So this is the ending. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thanks. Thank you. You remember Alan Carter. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Mr. Martin. Steve Foster-Pack. Anne Silverhead. Kim. Mr. Jerry. Thank you. Mr. Jeff Riesling, here. I'm Steve. I'm Steve. Nice to see you. Hi, brother. Thank you. Congratulations. I'm Lincoln Rijksen, I'm the Vice President of Arizona, and you may have any questions. Let me see if you want to. You really do. That's fine. Let's go back to the hospital. Well, we wanted to officially hand to you, Mr. President, our committee's annual report for this year. And I think you'll be proud to know that in the two-and-a-half years that we've served you and this committee, we've now turned this committee's role in from being a governmental watchdog, serving a function of seeing how we were implementing a public law. We felt it was a function that we better be served, to try to see how a government could be a catalyst in the private sector between major corporations and minority business enterprise. And we have set forth a blueprint that we recommend major corporations to follow so that strictly on a voluntary program basis, minority businesses throughout the country, we had a chance to have 11 public hearings. We interviewed with the individuals from major corporations that seemed to have the better-owned programs to assist minority business enterprise, tried to compile what we felt were the best ideas, and put them into this book. And we hope for the ongoing year that major corporations were now participating in such programs, we would like to do it, seeing how others are doing it. Overall, it's going to have a much greater impact. We feel that the government could ever have minority business affairs, and we're quite pleased that we could turn it around a little bit. Well, I'm in agreement with everything you said, and I thank you very much, I look forward to going through this this evening. And thank you, Mom. When you say you want the government to vote for the box of the people, we take that as a place for them. And I wish more people did, and take it at pace better. I mean it. Well, that's great. Yes, great, and I thank you all. Thank you. We really think you're one of the most important. Certainly you are a separate country on this course. You're staying there, of course, and everybody's proud of you. They really are, thank you, but it's been a pleasure with you. Mr. Bannon, can I have a minute to say hello to the senator? The last chairman of the box. Yes. Like, Lanny, want to go down to Augusta, please. Thank you so much very much. Thank you so much. Appreciate it very much. I'm going to be a happy four years, Mr. President. You are the rest of the first late. I should. Thank you. Nice. Thank you. So, nice to go over. Very seriously, fact that in Ethiopia, however, in 42 million, there was a much, much smaller country. First of all, to really see the kids up here in the middle of the country that like these little, the food is getting through. Our food is getting through. We're chartered planes to take food from port areas. Here's where, in fact, our food is going to be used to cook, and here's where, it's a very typical picture, really, where a food being cooked is actually being used. What it really goes to, I think, is that, and I know you've stated this many times, is that we as a country, with all food in the country, we would have some more responsibility for underpinning our civilized values. Now, I think, to me, one of my favorite things is that not only we're getting food there, but I'm convinced that we're really saving hundreds, and over time, there'll be hundreds of thousands. The business about, here's a kid, he came into camp today, that day. Within a few days, he would be dead, and be taking that food. But in a couple weeks, we can game with like that, you know. Nothing but legal. And the point there is that we feed them a high-protein food with soy bean meal and the cheap ingredients. And kids are just marvelous. The other part of the picture, Mr. President, that I think is interesting is that this young lady here is one of Sister Teresa's sisters. And she's just working enormously hard and reflective of the camp people there. And she said to me, Mr. McPherson, pray for me, because I can't seem to do enough. I guess she has more than one place like that. Today, we've made sure additional food has gotten there. And today, we're able to announce another $5,000 in cash that would be enough like mine for her. I thought to look at the kind of impact that's on him, I haven't shown you the hoard pictures, because many of them might, there certainly aren't a lot of stories, but food doesn't impact. But this is what they're like after we feed them? Oh, by the way. And then you couldn't find their smile at all. I just realized they could that quickly respond to a matter of weeks. Absolutely, absolutely. It is an interesting thing that after they've responded, I've been able to change the bar, it swarms all over the world. And kids do like to grab it again. But here where they really, obviously have been so closely to death, it seems like just to walk through, they almost hand physical contact is a great thing. To understand the dimensions of this situation is important. I don't want to talk about a grasp of the problem of getting the food to and in the country. It's almost a whole series of grand kings in the areas where the food used to go. People living in valleys and beaches have never really gone out. The top of which, of course, has been a civil war in this area. The church, extremely religious, it's been a civil war there. How to build on the top of a dead policy to collect the lives of all of which makes it a part. What we've said is, over the next, first of all, we've provided the largest amount of food over all Africa. This country's ever provided them the last 12 months. The largest amount the U.S. has ever historically provided them the last 12 months that they've provided them. But in the last 45 days, we've all done it some 50 years. In Ethiopia alone, there's about 7 million people in the new food in the next 14 months, and we estimate about a million tons will be necessary. For all of Africa, those countries I was talking about, the critical countries, there is perhaps at least 14 million people. Those figures aren't as refined as Ethiopia figures. And perhaps as many as 3 million tons will be necessary, there's no way we can get all of this together, and we shouldn't. What I've been working for is that we need an international conference of donors where we put down before us the plans for how much we need continent-wide, and everybody picks up at least one piece. Only by that means can we get everybody together. Incidentally, I think the Soviets have had a few band-aids keep playing the fine ground, but basically haven't done very much. And it's clear that if there's a food aid race, if you want to call it that, that we're doing a great deal and not doing very much. And that's basically the thrust to the person. They were really just ghosted to doing something by own actions. That's right. Frankly, if Mr. President has been