 I'm very excited and really so thrilled about this home world thing and I want to really, really thank you and congratulate you and ourselves. Well, I just, the first one I called was y'all. I told our friend, I think, called him at the press gathered, but we've made a real start and we're keeping the pledge that Madison made many years ago that the District of Columbia could govern itself and have its own representatives. And we got to work on the bill a little bit. I got Horsky doing it because I got a bunch of them to sign the petition. They won't vote for the bill unless we have a little protection on how they appraise government building. They have prayed that, you know, their local communities, people like Martha Griffiths of Michigan and John Dingell of Michigan, great liberal Democrats, but they wouldn't go with us. And I had to get right, Pat, when folks like that from Texas sign it on the ground that the council can transfer all the appraisals or property to the government building and make them carry the load instead of the homeowners and the business itself. So we got to put some provision in that'll give Congress a review of it if it's excessive or, you know. Can we, however, get the federal payment put on a form in, Mr. President? Well, I told it good when just to go and get a hold of Charlie Horsky and then let them take the things that they think that we're out of line on and see if we can take the initiative before they did. They reported their bill first, giving it back to Maryland. And we got to kill that one first. And then we got to get an amendment that our people can live with, catching back Horsky and them and beat them to it so that they can't make these arguments against it. And then we'll get to majority vote, but we've got a tough round. We're over the biggest hurdle over the first time it's ever been considered. It is so exciting because honestly, Phil and I used to go to little meetings about how to get home rules 20, over 20 years ago. You know, and all of us have worked here in the district. You know, I know you've seen it from the congressional side, but it's, you know, it's just so important for this time to get some sense of responsibility and some government of its own that I can't tell you how strong I am. Well, you're my sweet, and I appreciate it in here. Al was very, very helpful every time with Dr. ... Well, I know that you've been doing to him, and I hope we've been doing everything we can. He has. He's been a hundred and one. Hundred and one percent. One hundred and one percent. And it's ever we do anything. Oh, it was, it was very, very ... It's not everything we can do because I realize all the problems aren't settled now. You know, they're just beginning, but we just got to make this beginning, don't we? We have, and we've got it, and it's going. And I'm, I just dictated a little statement and said we've got an Emancipation Proclamation for the District of Columbia. This Congress will be remembered as a Congress that gives nations capital of freedom and their liberty. Because I am so terrific with you, with all that nature that the nation has had to be willing to do this on Congress. I told my statement, I dictated it. I came here 35 years ago, and I was a little boy, and I brought my bride here. A few years later, and my children were born here, and they were educated here. We've spent our life here, and we, this is just a small payment in kind for all the districts done for us and given us what their citizenship meant to us, and I'm going to see it through if I live. Well, I'm really thrilled, and anything we can do to help you in any way we sort want to do. Thank you, Kay. Bye.