 that the nation can bring to bear, and you're gonna get a firsthand opportunity to mix it up with them. So you are here at the Deployment Control Center on Golden Hill. So I'm Allison Black, commander of the First Special Operations Wing. I have two hats. I run the installation to make sure that the lights on and the bills are paid, our child development center folks are taken care of, our facilities are taken care of, then I also have the mission hat. And the mission hat is for the First Special Operations Wing, which you'll see a lot of our aircraft and our aviators and our special tactics airmen. We come together when the nation calls to get out there and get after it, and it starts here. So in this room, these walls and these hallways could talk. They would tell you stories. As a lieutenant, I sat in this room. I walked the hallways, I spent many hours at those stations, receiving my gear, getting the mission briefs. They will come in here, we'll look at the kinds of people we need to send, the equipment we need to send, the iron that we need to send, now we'll all get hashed out, and then they'll move through our processing line. Many of our men and women spent thousands and thousands of hours here. Our families come here to say their goodbyes. In fact, zero 200 this morning, tomorrow morning, I'll be back here pushing out our next group of deployers for six months. So it is a continuous cycle, and the nation is always calling us to build partnerships, to impose costs and create the lenders for the enemies and adversaries around the world. But it's not just about the sad detergent, it's about the homecoming. We have homecoming here. Homecoming's here. We'll bring our families in, the kiddos in. So as sad as it is to see them go, it's pretty darn great to bring them back and see that joy. Whether it's the pets that are here to greet them, whether it's mom, dad, brother, sister, kiddos, it is phenomenal. Again, thousands and thousands of hours, laughs, tears, jokes. So I ask you to just think about that as you get to process the OR station. We are gonna do it in record speed today, but you're gonna get a chance to hear our professionals talk to you about what our people will go through to get out the door. From an initial in processing to medical, to our religious, of course, our top one is there, our legal piece. And then we're gonna get you to the back of the building, another holding room, where we'll talk about our mission brief and what we're gonna show you today. We're gonna kind of tee up a scenario that would be very likely our folks would be called to be a part of. So ask the questions, they're excited to share it with you. Again, thank you for your time. Like Janice, I'll be with you most of the day today. Pepper me with questions and I will put you to the right professionals to give you the answers if I can't answer it myself. Again, thank you. And I think Bobby, the first group, is going to be. I'm sorry, Davis. Okay. Last name is Boyle. B-S-M-B-O-Y-L-E-Y-E. These are five. The first group is your group. Check this out. All the separation. We'll verify it to make sure everything is in place. Go to the center. All the way. We'll send it to go. I'm sorry to be in there. Stress things, parking checkers. Stress things, appreciate it. And we're also here for any type of spiritual support you might need before you head out the door. Yeah. You guys are mine. You guys are mine. I guess not me. I guess not me. We're waiting for that 30 seconds. My name is Dean Larger. I'm a professor of white lab. I'll go with him. I'm so proud of him. I'm a professor of scholarship. Yes. So all we need to do is make a message. So, like, you have an impact on your anxiety, anxiety, and anxiety. Oh, this is your group. I'm good. Ikita, you need to go. Correct. Okay, I'm sorry. Run and blood and don't... Oh, there are, like, a lot of things I need to do. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. So I'm going to start the grade on the Section Chief for Individual Protective Equipment. These are some of the items that we issue out to our employers. They protect them from chemical. Yes, they do. Just grab one of these. Then you can proceed. These items are issued out to our employers when they get ready to go downrange and they protect them from chemical, biological, radioactual, and nerve agents that might be in the air. So these are some of the items. I would suggest that the helicopters don't blow up dust so we'll switch over to those. Your earplugs and your headphones before you see them. Yes, thank you. And you want to end this as well? Yes, that one too. Any size or year for the big heads? No, it all comes in the same size. Okay, I got a big head. So, I am one of your guys's niece. So if you have any questions, I've got 14 years. Good morning to all of you. Thank you. Are you filling in the fourth row? Absolutely. Good morning.