 Welcome to the Knuckleheads of Liberty. You know, this is here by the age. I find it very fascinating that we as a society think it's okay to send off our young boys, you know, 18 years and older, to war, to use a gun, and to even kill someone, or be killed in the process of that. But yet, there are some sectors of our society think you have to be 21. I mean, we'll do this at 18, right? But some sectors of society think that we have to wait until they're 21 before they can even purchase a gun legally here in the United States. I mean, this just doesn't make sense to me. Well, and the reason it's important to gun owners, and particularly our association, is that the, you know, if once you're an adult, we didn't, gun owners didn't decide when people become an adult. You know, the government decided when people become an adult. And when people, that's 18. Once you become an adult, you get all the rights an adult gets in America, and their job is to protect those rights, not regulate them, not take them away, not, you know, step on them. So if we sit back and say, well, okay, you're an adult, but the Second Amendment really isn't as much of a right as the First Amendment or the Third Amendment or the Fourth Amendment. So yeah, you can keep that away from certain adults, even though they haven't broken the law, they're not dangerous, you know, like that. So the reason it's important is the Second Amendment is not a secondary right. We're not second class citizens. It's just as important as the First Amendment. It's just as important as all your other rights. The right to vote, for example. So if the government decides, hey, you know what? You're not an adult until you're 21. Okay, fine. But then 18, 19, and 20-year-olds can't be drafted. They can't vote, you know. They can't, you can't just decide that, hey, you know, this right is more important than that, right? Therefore, we're going to keep it from some adults and not others. So that's why we're fighting back. I mean, you know, we've ignored the issue of, well, at least statistics say that 18, 19, and 20-year-olds are blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Whatever. You decide when they're an adult. But once they're an adult, they get the right to keep and bear arms. Indeed. I guess buying alcohol would be somewhere in that mix as well. Right. Yes. Good point. Yes, that's true. That's true. Well, so people have asked, well, gee, what about driving or buying alcohol, that sort of thing? You know, if there's an organization that fights for that as a right, you know, I wish them all the best of luck. It's not really our, you know, we're a single issue, right? We're just worried about the Second Amendment. But I'd also ask them to examine is driving a car a right? Is buying alcohol a right? I don't know. That's up for them to decide. You know, anyone could, if you have a big chunk of land and you're driving a car on your chunk of land without going on government, you know, property, you don't need a driver's license, right? But it's just as soon as you get on that, that government property, which is a road, that's when they require a license for that. So anyway, try not to get too far down on the weeds. We stay single issue, but, you know, people do draw comparisons a lot. And we say, hey, whatever, you guys decide if that's a right, if it's not a right to talk to organizations who advocate for drinking and advocate for drive, whatever. But the Second Amendment is just as important as every other right. So if you have a license and an adult, they get it. Period. And I'm sorry. Well, I was just going to say that's kind of the way I think it helps to think about these things is that with that age where you're able to bind yourself to a contract, it really doesn't matter what the issue is. That's the age where your rights apply. And so if you're 18, if we've decided that's the age, then it just seems absolutely silly that a legislator might say, well, this age for that. And what's to stop them from looking at the other end as well, right? I mean, oh, God, you're 80. Maybe you're too old to be president. So, you know, to me, it seems real dangerous to sit around and think about taking away people's rights based upon what age they are, you know, one standard for an adult. And that should really be it. It isn't. It's not so subtle message they're sending. They're basically saying, hey, look, you have to understand that the Second Amendment is a very dangerous right. So, you know, no, it's not, you know, owning a gun is not not owning a gun and not being able to defend yourself is a very dangerous situation. That's what's dangerous. So we really, you know, the not so subtle message they're sending that, you know, we have to somehow concede that firearms are, you know, the boogeyman. Forget it. We don't concede that in any way. Keeping people from defending themselves. That's really dangerous. Yeah. Well, the government, the government will always see firearms in the arms of the law-abiding citizen as a dangerous thing because this is what's supposed to protect. The Second Amendment is not there for hunting. It's not there for target shooting. The Second Amendment is there for us to defend ourselves, both from the criminals on the streets and from a tyrannical government. And people don't seem to understand this. This is a real problem and you absolutely right when you say it is dangerous when we are unarmed. It is very dangerous. Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness always.