 I'm going to move it down a little bit. I'm going to move it down a little bit. I'm going to move it down a little bit. I notice you've got your valentine's score. Yes. Listen, something I'm going to start with right immediately. And that is, first of all, we're going to have reports from the Vice President and from the Secretary of State on their recent trips, but because the Secretary is due up on the hilltop there for testimony this morning, I'm going to call him right now about any reports on these trips. Thank you, Mr. President. I visited the Department of State. One gentleman here came through the line and was very polite about it, and I told him he walked away from the country today, and I had the wrong person who left the delivery room for their daughter. You get to it. You get a new credit. Thank you. Anyway, we distorted here in our country, and I think at a great price to our country, and I hope that we can continue and restore that balance. In the back of my mind, I can just see if that happens, the federal establishment shrinking and shrinking down to what it was really intended to be in this house. At one time, the First President lived here, and at one time there was a story that's told about the rooms right above us where the living quarters are, and it's going to be Teddy Roosevelt's time. This was still where all the President's staff gathered and so forth and all the executive work was done. Until one day, Edith Kermit Roosevelt said to President Teddy Roosevelt, you're going to have to get those people out of here if you expect me to raise seven kids. They'd have been a little crowded by now. I think the executive branch consists of about 1,700 people. Believe it or not, they are all busy all the time. Matter of fact, I go around many times at the end of the day and say, go home. It seemed a little reluctant to do so, but I'm delighted and I'm not going to go on making a speech or anything. I'm going to mingle here for a few minutes and then we'll get back to you.