 I'll drive it out there. How much you want for it? A sign, sir. Is it the half? Probably. You know if I sleep with you. It's worth for you today. Wasn't it? What do you need it for? You don't care. He told me. You didn't care if you sold it. That's what he told me. So after the Marine Corps, did you ever expect it? You'd be doing this? Back home? No. Had no idea. I got out and I did some contracting first. I worked for a company called Oscar Technologies. I worked training guys getting ready to head over on thermal systems. I did that for a year. I liked it, but there's a lot of politics in it. It's a lot of BS that goes with it. I mean, not with Oscar, but just with the job. So I did that for a year. Worked for BAE for three months. Same BS with them in the industry. So that's why I like this the most. You don't see anybody telling me what to do around here, you know? Especially somebody who doesn't know more than me. That's the worst part about people telling you what to do. And I get to work with good-looking guys like Adam. Yeah. It's fun, right? Yeah. Always. Can you see yourself doing this for the rest of your life? I could. Definitely. A lot of people are like, what are you doing, you know? That's the biggest thing is that everyone's like, you know, they're trying to hook me up, they're giving me jobs and whatever else. Like what? Just different companies. Like kind of going back to the industry kind of. But I don't think they understand that I don't really want to do that, you know? I really do this, do something I like doing. I mean, of course, I could go make a lot more money doing that stuff. You're kind of far. But how much, you know, with this job I work so hard at night I can go to sleep. I'm so tired. Man, it's never the same. The connector's in your mouth, so I can't ask any more questions. Yeah. That was a question. I think he wants to answer something. He already had me, I already told him everything. Who's the better looking between you two? Oh, gosh. The camera will tell you that. Fallen who? Yeah. Yeah, I'll look better. Troy was here. He'd be yelling right now. I wanted to revisit that question that everybody seems to ask about what your chosen life is after the Marine Corps and going to be nominated for the Medal of Honor. Is it because everybody else has a different conception of what your life ought to be? I think it is. I think I really don't, I don't understand it. I guess it's part of the thing is I don't see myself as any different than I was before, you know? I see. Okay, so I'm getting an award. But for some reason, everyone else just thinks that, I guess it's because they're so honored. I don't know, they're so happy to be around me or something, but they just feel like I should have a free ticket when it seems like they want. And I'm like, you know, if I get a free ticket on my own, like I do something good or I make my own business and I make a lot of money, then I'll use that free ticket, but I won't use a free ticket off of the Medal of Honor. That's definitely not going to happen. And why is that? Because the price that was paid for that, it's not, it's not for me. If it was for me, I might use it, but it's not for me. It's for the guys that died and their families and for the people fighting, you know? So you think it seems like everybody else thinks that a Medal of Honor should be an automatic elevation in life for you then? Exactly. And that's what they seem to, seem to present it as. But that's the furthest thing from the truth. That's a good question. I'll have to get back on that one. Well, just watching you work and seeing your hands come into the viewfinder and so on, talking about the price was paid and every time you're lifting your hands and working on those wires, those names on those bands are the guys that you're talking about, right? Exactly. I haven't taken them off since I got them. You see my, when was that? About a year, a little over a year ago. I've been in arguments at airports many times. Over those bands? Over those bands. Oh, because they make the things that go off? No, they don't make them go off, but they weren't taken off anyways. So, I mean, that's the least I could do, you know? They're all dead. They gave their lives. The least I could do is wear two bands around my arms, their names on it, you know? To remember them. Which bands have which names? One on my right hand has Lieutenant Johnson and Gunny Kenefik and the one on my left hand has Doc Layton and Gunny Johnson. Are those forever? Forever. If you didn't have any bands on your hands, nobody died when you got this. I wouldn't have got it. Let's just face facts.