 I want to start off by thanking Mark. He called me and asked where I'd come up and speak. Look, I'm getting so sick and tired of the way everybody's being treated. All American workers that I've had it up to here, like a lot of you have. And look, look, I was going to make this short because it's raining here and I'm going to lose you all. But look, looking out at this crowd, it looks like my own neighborhood in Scranton and Claymont. No, I really mean it. I mean it. I really mean it. People will bust their neck. People will go out and make a living. People will play by the rules. People have done everything they're supposed to do. And people are entitled to be treated with respect and decency and fairness. You know, my dad used to say, Joey, a job's about a lot more than a paycheck. It's about your decency of your place in the community. It's about how you're treated. It's about decency. It's about honor. It's about being able to look your kidney eye and say, honey, it's going to be okay and mean it. No, I mean it. I really mean it. I'm not joking about this. It's not a political. It's a God's truth. When my dad left Scranton, he didn't have work. Every time someone lose a job and claim out a woman can relive, he'd say that. It's about a lot more than a paycheck. And what's happening here is workers are not being treated across the board with dignity. They're not being treated like they matter. And let me get something straight with you all. Wall Street bankers and CEOs did not build America. You build America! Yeah! And guys, that's not hyperbole. That's just...