 Thank you for inviting me. Thank you for just taking a moment to listen to me. I appreciate that very, very much. I am proud to be the co-chair of our caucus, along with Chris M. Holland. And I just want to thank all of you for the work you do. You know, Washington State, where our front is very engaged in renewables. And we're working far with the folks within our state across the country to move renewables again. I get excited about the technology around renewables. And I know that in this room you're looking at some of that. You're all engaged in that. You see it happening across the world. I think our council people are getting excited about the technology in renewables. How many of you have been in a Tesla? How many have driven a Tesla? How many own a Tesla? Well, I've been in one. That's just part of the excitement we've been talking about. What do we do with the energy that operates so far, right? That makes it move pretty good a month fast. We didn't go over the speed limit because we knew we had to talk about this car. So we did experiment a little bit, however. So that's just the extent of some of the technology. We had wind energy, solar energy, thermal energy. All of those things that we can tap into that keep our state. Like we like to say Washington State, great clean and pristine because we are. I want to share with you a real quick story. And if you like this because it's kind of a police cadet about stories. I was bleeding that even the Green River Serial Burger case. How many are familiar with that case? This is not many. Some. This person killed somewhere between 70 and 80 people in Washington State and Oregon. He pled guilty to 49 burgers. You know what? You know how we caught this person? We caught this person through science. And it was the science of DNA. So this is why I get excited. In 1982, I was 31 years old. I had brown hair. And I'm investigating a serial burger. Right? I still have only $35. But I was investigating a serial burger. We collected evidence from the banks of the River South of Seattle. It was liquid evidence. It was fluid evidence from bodies. We froze it. In 1987, we collected a saliva sample from a suspect out of 40,000 tissues. 1982, a sample of evidence. 1987, a sample of evidence. We froze it in time. In 1999, DNA came along. It was not enough though. The science had not been developed enough. But we still have a thing that it would be. And we worked toward 2000, 2001 case. In March of 2001, we submitted our evidence again. They said the science had come closer. And we were ready. We could take those white news samples and we could examine those. And we think we could find or kill them. In September, on September 10th, the day before 9-11, my detectives and scientists came to my office and they said we have identified no suspect from DNA. Out of 40,000 tissue sheets, evidence from 1982 and 1987, they identified one guy responsible for 49 murders. Now that's why I continue to have hope. How does this science agree with that? It's the science, the research, the technology. It's the excitement that all of us should have in this room about the future. But all the technologies that you're looking at today move us forward to renewable, clean energy that will get us off fossil fuels. It will free us from the rest of the world's fossil fuel energies and make us independent and clean and clean for steaming grease. I just want you to stay. So I appreciate your attention. Thank you for all of our work that you do. I continue to do that. Thank you and have a great day.