 I'll tell you, the more I just stayed awake last night thinking about this thing, the more I think of it, I don't know what in the hell it would look like me getting into another career. I don't see what we can ever hope to get out of there with once we're committed. I believe the Chinese coming into it, I don't think that we can fight them 10,000 miles away from home and never get anywhere in that area, I don't think it's worth fighting that far and I don't think we can get out and it's just the biggest damn mess there is. It's an awful mess. One thing that has carried me, I'm worth to me, what is Laos worth to me, what is it worth to this country? Now we've got a treaty but still, we've got a treaty but still everybody else got a treaty out there and I've done the thing about it. Now of course if you start running the Communist, they may just chase you right into your own kitchen. That's the trouble. And that is what the rest of the, that half of the world is going to think if this thing comes apart on us. That's the dilemma. That's exactly the dilemma. But everybody I talk to, it's got any sense in there. They just say, oh my God, please give us those. Of course I've read the Nashville stuff this morning and it's just milk toast as it can be. He's got no spine at all. But this is a terrible thing we're getting ready to do. President, I just think that because it's the only big decision in one sense that this one is one we're having, that we either reach up and get it or we let it go by and I'm not telling you today what I do in your position. I just think the most we have to do is to pray with it for another while.