 Thank you everybody for coming on such a hot day. Thank you to the Marigold Peace Group. Thank you to my band. And thank you particularly to Nick Dean, who is hoping to bring this whole group together. It's truly inspiring to see all of you here. When we came in, we were a bit early. There are about three lines of chairs, and I thought, oh, oh. But look, here you are. We all know why we're here. We're here because it's the anniversary of when we all marched 20 years ago. Right? We did. Did they take any notes? Right. Never again. Okay, now what I have to say is mercifully brief. Here is it, and I'm happy to take questions if you like. It's called, Here We Stand. You know, like Mark Luther, we are standing here. As people were in Melbourne yesterday to recall one of Australia's worst days. The day when we started a war of aggression. We joined a small coalition to invade Iraq. We left that country in physical, social, and economic ruin. No Australian government has inquired into why we did it or reported on what we did. We could do it again. So we are standing here as others all over Australia and the world are standing today and for them tomorrow because we don't want another expeditionary war. We're catastrophic, and we would not be the United States or Japan. We have now the United States unfettered use of our territory for military installations and for nuclear-capable B-52 bombers aimed at China and making Australia a target. Provocatively, Australia will buy nuclear-powered submarines, tonnable cruise missiles, and battle tanks. Not for our defence, but to deter China. We are standing here to demand accountability from the executive government to the parliament by reforming the power of the executive to send Australian forces to an aggressive war on the decision of a prime minister alone. To require entry or a report on these war wars or their outcomes and by requiring that the grounds for a war be spelled out clearly and in totality to a parliament. We are standing here to call on those who run our bypass of foreign and defence policies to do three things. One, and observe our nuclear non-proliferation obligation on the Australian draft treaty for the prohibition of nuclear weapons. Take our commitment to international law and treaties that prohibit the threat or use of force against other countries. That Australia will not join a US coalition for war against China if Simon Green's promise to the parliament on the 20th of March and the anniversary is tomorrow with March 2003. He promised that as prime minister he would never allow Australian policy to be determined by another country. Never commit to an unnecessary war when peace was available, possible rather. And never send Australians to war without telling them the truth is what we want our current government on this day.