 I'm going to start by talking about the Second Amendment's origins, which, if you'll read it, really spoke to the need to have a civilian militia that was armed. The time that it was written, the militia was an extra military force to the standing army that could have been necessitated by potential invasion or insurrection. So that was the beginning sensibility. And what's important in that beginning is the notion of transparency. Transparency means that the government needs to know who has weapons, whether it's a standing army or whether it's a militia. There's a necessity to know where the weapons are so they can be organized for the defense of the country and, of course, any kind of weaponry used for hunting could potentially be used for other purposes. So what I want to talk about here is the importance of transparency in today's gun control measures that what we need to know is who has the weapons and where they're beginning to concentrate. If weapons concentrate in urban areas that have a lot of violence, then that's an indicator that people don't feel safe. If they concentrate in other countries, that's also an indication where people feel unsafe or on the verge of some sort of insurrection. It's also important to note that it's now been studied very carefully, very empirically that the best way to overthrow a dictator or to bring about social change is with nonviolence. That violence is not nearly as effective. So the idea that we have to hide away weapons in case of a revolution is really antiquated thinking about how social change really occurs. It's also true that arming everybody is not a way to make the world more secure. We have 30,000 gun deaths per year in the United States, 20,000 which are suicides. So really using guns to get security just makes us all more insecure, whether it's here or whether it's around the world. So we have to look at all the features that drive people's urge for gun ownership. And again, hunting is one thing, but all the other reasons people have around self-defense oftentimes really just don't match up with the real security concerns of a culture.