 I want to welcome everyone to Sagra Park as we welcome these amazing, distinguished guests to Columbia South Carolina to help us deal with what we know is indeed the greatest public health threat in the last 100 years. Here we have had an amazing local effort led by so many of you in this space right now. We want to thank you for your incredible leadership, the work we've been doing together. We found out that the misinformation that's flowing around this time makes this pandemic different than the one before. All the people who are on one of four trying to get over the Spanish flu. No one question we're in a mess. I've been doing my research. I ran across pictures of a Georgia Tech game. A Georgia Tech football game in 1918. Everybody in the police. We're here next. In 1918. Here we are with all the enlightenment we've had for the last 100 years. We've got people questioning science. For those of you who talk about the intersection of housing and health, because that's where the sanitation system is at this time. About a year and a half ago, they told everybody that we need to call the state home. Remember that? Remember what I said? What happened? You didn't have a phone. They asked us to teach our children virtually. You didn't have ICU in there. Or if you didn't have broadband, or the devices that we needed. So we had children moving as children. We lost the entire year of education. More than 300,000 people in this community were able to have a very long way. 330,000 people. In 40 out of 46 counties, you cannot get a two-bedroom car. Just make the minimum wage. This state has regulations that just have every other state in the United States. Even before. So this is really what has dealt us another blow. But we are resilient people. We are resilient people. We are inspired. That's what I just asked. It's a lot of work we have to come back to South Carolina because you're thinking like that. That's a mission. That's what I'm trying to do. That's what I'm trying to do.