So I got this smart aleck email during the break reacting to my comments to the guy who wanted to know why his liberal Harvard and Ivy League educated guys are so stupid.
I'll share the email.
I'll paraphrase the email.
I got the San Francisco thing here, and a whole idea of Ford keeping their product manufacturing here, and I uh uh Apple thinking of bringing it here.
It's amazing what's going on here.
Live from the Southern Command in Sunny South Florida.
That's right.
So good luck!
One exciting busy broadcast hour remains.
J suit fatigue, L. Rushmo here behind the golden EIB microphone at 800-282-2882.
And if you want to send an email, L Rushbow at EIBNet.us.
So this guy sends me a note.
He says, you're the one that's arrogant.
You sit here and you claim they're wrong and you're right, that they're programmed, that they're not really thinking, but you never see their way, you never agree with them.
You're just like them.
You just won't you won't be honest about it.
Signed know it all.
Let me tell you the difference.
I am a conservative.
I have said I don't know how many times, conservatism is an intellectual pursuit.
And by that I mean liberalism's easy.
Liberalism is a most gutless easy choice.
You can it's not even a choice.
Liberalism is just you feel it.
And there's nothing hard about it at all.
You don't even have to do anything.
You just have to notice suffering and talk about how and you're great, big hearted, compassionate person.
You haven't done diddly squat about it.
In fact, you may be even the cause of it, but you get all this credit for compassion and caring, but you don't have to do anything.
And you you don't ever have to propose solutions.
No.
Just the acknowledgement of the suffering alone makes you a good person.
But here's the big difference.
Conservatism, I believe, happens to be what happens when people behave according to a certain moral code, uh, a certain sense of right and wrong people that are accepting responsibility for themselves.
Conservatism is what happens when you're a good citizen.
But here's the real difference.
Those guys that he was talking about, all these Harvard and Brown and other Ivy League educated people, they can't tell me one thing about me.
Because they haven't even gone to the trouble to learn what I believe.
They believe in nothing but caricatures.
Of all conservatives, they're such superiorists and such closed-minded people, they don't even take the time to really understand what I, as a conservative or you really think and why.
But I can tell you everything about them.
I can tell you more about them than they know about themselves.
I have studied it.
My arrival at conservatism is the result of actually thinking and considering the two and following my instincts.
There is nobody better at deconstructing liberals than me.
If there is, I haven't met them.
That's not a brag, it's a statement of fact.
Because I've spent my life studying them so that I can predict them, so that I can warn people, because liberalism is destructive.
As we've seen in the last eight years, as we've seen our whole lives, the aspects of liberalism this country has had under its control are in rotten shape.
They're in horrible rotten shape, and the people that live under liberal control are miserable and unhappy and constantly enraged.
I can explain why.
I can tell any liberal why he or she thinks what they think.
I can predict to them what their reaction to any event or person is going to be, because I know them.
Because I have taken the time, because I'm curious to study it.
I know what liberalism is.
I know from where it springs and derives, and I know the vast majority of people who are liberals, what they're going to do, say, and think about pick a subject.
They can't get close to doing the same with me, because they think it's even beneath them to know.
They're so close-minded and so superiorist and so prejudiced that conservatism to them is something so weird and odd.
And what do they think it is?
It's evil stuff.
It's racist, it's sexist, it's big.
Why do they think that they don't think it?
Because it isn't true.
It's not something you can know.
If you believe that, you are wrong, and you are not smart.
But don't tell them that.
They haven't taken the time, and they never will take the time.
Go look at what any liberal says about anybody they disagree with, and especially conservatives.
The first thing you're going to hear them talk about is hate, too much hate.
Then you'll hear racist and then bigoted and automatically homophobic.
Intolerant.
I mean, I can just go down the list.
And they all believe about any conservative alive.
And in many of their cases, about any Republican alive.
And they don't think it because they haven't arrived at their viewpoint by virtue of thought.
And they don't think it because they haven't arrived at that point of view by virtue of actual experience.
They have just accepted the indoctrination or the programming that they have been subjected to their whole lives about conservatives.
As such, they are afraid of conservatism and conservatives.
Greatly afraid.
They have tremendous fear.
But it's the lack of curiosity they have to even try to understand it.
They don't want there to be.
They don't want, you know, we're the ones that talk about crossing the aisle because we're good people.
And we actually do want them to be right about us.
They're not interested.
They're not interested in anything that promotes friendship, comedy, getting along.
They are discriminatory.
They are prejudicial.
They are bigoted.
And yet that's what they throw around about everybody else.
They are the shining examples of all of those things.
Liberals are.
The more committed, the worse.
Many liberals don't even know what liberalism is.
They're just following the train because it's the safest way to go.
So that's the big difference in why I'm not one of those Ivy League guys that our caller was talking about.
Because I can explain everything there is about them.
And I can tell you exactly why I would never be a liberal.
Why I couldn't be one.
Why I would not be able to live with myself if I were.
They can't get close to explain to you why they're liberals.
They can't even tell you what's great about it.
Other than surface-oriented, feel-good stuff.
They don't even know what it is.
Because if they did and they're that smart, they wouldn't be liberals if they knew what it really was.
If they ever took the time to admit what really happens when liberals control things, they would never do it.
They would never be one.
So, Mr. Limbaugh, how do they sit there and stay liberals when they're destroying things?
They don't think they are.
It's our fault that they're not succeeding, or there's not enough money, or the right enough people haven't been charged.
And liberalism's greatness and utopia, it's always way out there in the future.
Like everything they believe.
It's always way out there, and there's always obstacles in their way.
It's all every failure they have is our fault.
Same thing with every issue of theirs.
They're going to fix everything in 50 years.
They're going to fix everything in 30 years.
Climate change, you name it.
Nothing will ever get fixed In the present day, because subconsciously they know that it isn't going to get fixed because what they believe in doesn't work.
I can say all of this about them from a completely informed and educated point of view.
They can't talk about me as a conservative this way for 10 seconds.
So there.
Now about this power business, no, I haven't forgotten the San Francisco stories right here.
I was talking to Mr. Snerdley about this.
He came in, he was he was uh grinning ear to ear over the news that Ford was going to continue to build an SUV here instead of moving it to Meiko.
And he was all excited that Trump broke the news, you know, on Twitter, not the drive-bys.
And Bill Ford, you know, there are the people out there trying to say, hey, Ford was gonna do this anyway, and they announced it back in August.
Trump had nothing to do with it.
Really?
Trump had nothing to do with it.
It was announced in August of this year.
It goes to my theory of what's happening here.
Don't care.
Bill Ford, William Clay Ford III, I think it is Bill Ford, they call him Billy and the family.
He called Trump and he told him, why'd you do that if Trump had nothing to do with it?
Why?
Why did he do that?
Well, he's a friend of Trump's.
I don't know.
Do you know he's a friend of Trump's?
I don't know that.
But he still called Trump.
Now, over at Apple, folks, as I have deigned to explain, moving iPhone production to the United States, it would be as close to impossible as you can do it,
but there's no way an iPhone would cost the same price after you do it, and there would be constant shortages of them because it takes factories with three, four hundred thousand people to make these things at a clip that meets the demand.
You know, Apple is still behind on the iPhone 7 Plus.
You go to an Apple store today, you still can't find one.
I have more of them in my stash closet back there than an Apple store has.
The demand for these things is such that they are there's an imbalance, the supply-demand imbalance, and it may not reach equilibrium equilibrium before the end of the year.
If you go to the Apple online store right now and try to buy an iPhone 7 Plus jet black, they say three to four weeks to ship.
That's ship.
They ship from China.
That can take a week.
Five weeks, maybe.
Bye-bye Christmas.
And they've got hundreds of thousands of people making these things.
The jet black iPhone uh the jet black case is a massive project to manufacture that.
And the yield rate, I understand, is like 70%.
They have to throw 30% that precise on that particular model.
But all the models are backwards.
Now, to move all of that to the United States, I don't think they can.
I think what would happen, like the Mac Pro, the Mag Pro is actually built by a Singapore company that built a factory in Austin.
And what Apple's talking about, FoxCon is their manufacturer in uh in China, Han High Precision, it's the Anglicized name's FoxCon.
And they're talking about locating a factory here, but it would be Chinese technology that would just be located here to build the factory.
I don't have a problem with that.
Here's what fascinates me about this.
Tim Cook is the CEO of Apple.
And it's safe to say that 90% of the Apple top 100 execs were for Hillary.
It's safe to say that about pretty much any Silicon Valley Bay Area Te Company.
There is no way these people wanted Trump for a whole bunch of reasons, but it's primarily because they're closed-minded about conservatism.
Again, it's it's it's not so much if if they actually examined Trump economic policy versus Hillary, they ought to no way support Hillary Clinton.
But they did, in large part because of the pressure to go along with everybody else that thinks the same way and the cultural things and the social things.
But what amazes me about this, and actually alarms me.
If Hillary Clinton had been elected, nobody from Apple at any time would have ever, ever floated the idea of maybe making some iPhones in America.
The reason they did, it has to be because Donald Trump, during the campaign, said he was going to make that happen.
Well, Donald Trump can't make it happen.
And he can't wave a magic wand to make it happen.
No president can wave a magic, he can exert cultural, societal, political pressure, but he can't make it happen.
He can't make Ford keep jobs here.
He can pressure them.
Look, this is a long way of getting my my point is that here you have Apple diametrically opposed to Trump, did not want Trump to succeed, did not want him to get elected, doesn't agree in their own minds that are wrong about with anything.
Yet Trump wins, and all of a sudden, hey, you know what?
We're thinking about moving iPhone production, some of it to the United States.
What does that mean?
What does that represent to you?
To me, it represents fear.
And that's what bothers me.
I don't like people afraid of the government.
Whether they're my political enemy or not, I don't, I don't, I don't like people thinking they CEOs.
I don't like cronyism.
I don't like CEOs making business decisions because they're afraid of what some executive in the government's gonna do.
It bothers me.
Are you saying you don't care if Apple makes I'd love for Apple to make iPhones here?
I happen to know how impractical that is.
And I happen to know that even if it does happen, it isn't happening anytime soon.
And if it does happen, it's not gonna be that many American jobs.
Although I think it'd be great, but it's so complicated with the supply chain that's all over in China and the and and the Far East as well.
But more to me, it's it's Obama, classic.
The automobile companies, I mean, Obama put the fear of God in them, so they went along.
The insurance company, fear of God, he went along with them with Obamacare.
So had all these people acting not in their own best interests or the self-interests and the best interest of their customers.
They had that they were behaving because they're afraid of what the government might do if they didn't play along.
Hospitals, nurses' associations, when it comes to Obamacare, he put the fear of God into people that didn't play along.
And that's why all these insurance, no business getting in bed with this kind of a plan.
Even if there was a mandate that was going to require every customer to buy health insurance, it was not good for the country.
It was never going to work, but they didn't care.
We had a president who was acting very authoritarian and was making it plain he was going to punish people that didn't go along.
I don't know if people view Trump that way, but if they do, it bothers me.
I I I don't I don't like people who can be bent that easily.
It just goes to show you how much power the federal government has where even a suggestion uh uh a threat the ban of the iPhone can cause a CEO to make a statement.
He may not mean it.
He may they actually may never ever move a factory here to make iPhones or assemble them even partially could happen, but I just don't like the fear.
And I I'm I'm in the founding documents of this country, there was never anything about making it all work because people were gonna fear the president.
And people are gonna fear the House of Representatives and fear the Senate or fear the IRS.
Well, there we wasn't an IRS at the founding.
That's what bothers me about this.
I know fear can be a great motivator when used for you know results that are upstanding and right.
But anyway, break time, out of time, back in a sec, don't go away.
Folks, I don't want you to believe this garbage that Ford was gonna build this SUV in Kentucky anyway that Trump had nothing to do with it.
Bill Ford called Trump, and and this is a Bill Ford's calling Trump is a genuine change in direction For Ford.
This is all spelled out in the Wall Street Journal.
The Washington Post is dead wrong about this today.
Ah, there's no news here.
This typical Trump braggadocio.
Ford was gonna make this thing.
No, no.
Ford called Trump because it does represent a genuine change in direction.
This is not a symbolic gesture.
Now, some of you might think, Rush, you're wrong.
Apple and Ford are not doing what they're doing because they're afraid.
I hope that's true.
Maybe it's just cronyism.
Maybe maybe they've realized okay, Trump's the president, and he said that he wants us to build phones, so we better sidle up and be friendly.
I guess that that would be preferable.
I just I don't like cronyism, which is what we had eight years of.
You can call it crony capitalism or crony socialism, whatever.
But I really don't like people being afraid.
I can understand being afraid of the boss being afraid, but this being afraid of the president.
This is something about it worries me from the standpoint of the structure of the country.
That's that's not.
I mean, no, you can be afraid of an individual man that might instill fear.
I mean, if the the fear of the power of the office is what I'm talking about.
That's not built into it, and that's not part of the uh part of the design.
Look, I've got this San Francisco teachers union story to do.
Plus I've got to get back to your phone calls, though.
And but now I have another obscene profit break coming up.
So you sit tight, my friends, the fastest three hours in media just rolls right on.
No, I have to rebuild my inbox.
And that's gonna take 25 minutes.
No, I can't do that.
You tell them it's Friday anyway.
I don't want to do it.
Here's Debbie in Seaford, Virginia.
Great to have you on the uh EIB network.
Hello.
Thank you, Mr. Lumbaugh.
I am a first-time caller and a restaurage since 1989.
I am such an honor.
So thrilled to have you here.
Thank you very much for that.
Such an honor.
I can now cross this off of my bucket list.
I'll get right to the point.
What is the likelihood of a Trump administration investigating Obama for alleged crimes in conjunction with the Clinton Foundation?
Because if he Obama pardons Hillary, then uh doesn't that expose possibly what is the connection to Obama?
It yeah.
Uh it you could logically based on what we know when Obama used a fake name, claiming that he uh all the while claiming he didn't know that she had an illegal server in the basement in Chappaqua.
He used a fake name, pseudonym, so as not to be discovered, and then said, I found out about it, uh when I read the fake news.
Uh well uh I can arrest you.
But here's the thing, Debbie.
Uh you can't sue uh president or former president they're indemnified.
That would be a nightmare if you could.
And the protocol is that if a president is not impeached while in office, then no, there's just nothing it's gonna Trump nor any other president would go after uh a former president like this.
Then that's not to say that if if Hillary's not pardoned, there might not be an investigation of the Justice Department to find the state to find out what went on there in the under the rubric of draining the swamp, but no, there won't there won't be any official legal pursuit of President Obama by the Trump administration.
Could it be a way to expose the gross abuse of office by the Democrats?
Uh to conduct such an investigation?
Absolutely.
Um that you could do that, I guess, but you could you wouldn't do that under the auspices of a of an FBI or otherwise legal investigation.
You would impanel some blue ribbon commission that is operating in the auspices of the inspectors generals in what you are gonna call a clean sweep of the government bureaucracies to root out whatever has been going on the purpose of fixing it.
You don't specify anybody or anything.
You just say that we're gonna we're gonna go in here and hoover this place, and whatever we deal with, we'll report to you.
I don't know it with as much energy as Trump's gonna have to focus.
Remember this but before we can do any we have to stop the direction we're headed now.
If you look at the country as a giant ship, before we can turn it around and go the other way, we've got to stop.
This has been our problem all along.
We haven't really advanced anything we believe our whole existence the last thirty five years or even longer has been just to stop the advances they have made and that has to happen here too.
And that's a lot of work.
This is just one election and that's all it is right now.
All we've won is an election.
There's gonna be a lot of work.
And now what you're describing might be part of it, you know investigating to find out all the however you want to characterize all crap, garbage with all the abuse.
Yeah Now unto what you were saying earlier about Apple coming back to the US, that could possibly be part of Trump's new deal proposal.
What do you mean?
Put people to work.
Put the African American nation back.
Oh I have I have no doubt that that Trump there's there's gonna be a massive movement toward reclaiming American jobs and creating new jobs in all kinds of new growth sectors.
I have no doubt that the people that Trump is gonna is gonna put around him are gonna be for that expressed for the in in all areas.
I that that's gonna be one of the primary objectives of getting the economy actually functioning again.
Um what better way to bridge that I'm not a racist gap than to say I'm not only gonna give make sure you um African Americ American African Americans get jobs, I'm gonna make sure that they're high tech jobs.
They're fantastic jobs.
They've gotta want them there's all there's all kinds of factors that that that that go into this but Trump is the only guy that's gone to the African American community and made an appeal to them.
And um so I I'm right now like you I'm I'm feeling strains of optimism here over a lot of things.
The direction, the speed, the potential speed but remember we still have a dangerous couple of months to navigate here.
Look before you go, Debbie, would you like a brand new iPhone or iPhone 7 or 7 plus yes I'm a huge Apple fan, Ford fan.
I could tell since you started talking about it.
What do you have an iPhone now and if so what kind?
I do.
I have a six.
You have a six okay so uh would you like a seven or a seven plus seven plus.
Seven plus what carrier are you with?
Verizon.
Verizon easily done.
You're the phone you're gonna get you have a well it I don't have much color variety here.
In fact it's gonna have to be black.
That's great.
And but they're beautiful.
They've got two new shades of black and there you want the you want the shiny jet black or the matte black?
Shiny black.
All right good good choice.
These are so hard to find only people like me have them.
Now here's the thing your phone is gonna arrive unlocked it may not have a SIM card in it.
It might if it has a SIM card it might have Verizon.
It doesn't matter it's unlocked and it will work out of the box.
You said put your SIM card in it or take it to Verizon and with your current phone and tell them it's a gift and you want your number on move to the big phone it it'll be done in a matter of seconds.
Okay?
You hang on, Mr Snurdly get your address and we can send this thing out to you today.
And up next is uh Lee Ann Lee Ann's in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania great to have you Lee Ann, hi.
Hi Mr Lemb, thank you so much for taking my call.
You bet.
Um first of all I just wanted to quickly set off and say thank you for being a constant voice of reason for me.
You were my quote unquote safe place always even before I knew I needed one.
Um but primarily the reason for my call is I want to tell you about my son Michael who's thirteen is an an athlete and he is a math kid but he would rather do anything else but read.
Um but he has read every one of the Rush Revere books and the other day when I told him there was a new one coming out he was his response was yes and I've never heard him respond about a book like that.
And I have to wonder in part if it was because this past summer my husband I took our two children to Massachusetts on vacation.
We went to Plymouth.
We went to Boston.
We walked the Freedom Trail, and I have to say the books came to life for us while we were there.
Oh, that is such magic.
It was.
It truly was.
We in Plymouth Plantation, they have um historical figures, you know, that that um go back and taught that play the role back in time.
So we were talking to Governor Bryford about the commonwealth that they had back then and how it didn't work, and we crossed the Trolled River and went to the Old North Church, and it was just an amazing experience.
And I have to thank you for what you're doing for our children, because I'm sure my son is not the only one out there that you have touched both historically and gotten them to want to read.
It's amazing.
So keep them coming.
Well, I can't I I don't know, I can't thank you enough.
I thought those are just magic words that you have made those books come to life by going to all of these historical, great historical places that we've written about in the Rush Revere books.
It does um uh bring it all to life.
And it's it's great that your son is is living the experience.
This is the actual purpose we had in writing the books this way was to take young readers like this actually to the events and make them part of them so that they would remember it as they grow up, rather than have it recited to them as as as most things are taught.
Well, you've you've made my day.
Look, uh two things.
Would you like a brand new iPhone 7 or 7 plus?
Oh my gosh, thank you.
That would be amazing.
Thank you.
What which one do you want now?
Do you know the difference in the two?
I I heard you talking earlier.
Um I actually am not an iPhone user, so you might be converting me.
Um, but I think I'm just gonna go with the seven, if that's okay.
Okay, so you want to go with the four point seven inch screen.
That's the smaller of the two.
It's a gr it's a great phone.
You're not going wrong with it.
Some people like the bigger screen.
This was the bigger screen is five and a half inches.
What what kind of phone do you have now?
I have a Samsung, like an F five.
So I imagine it's probably pretty comfortable.
Oh, yeah, it's definitely time to upgrade.
What was that, James?
Yeah, yours hadn't blown up on you, has it?
No.
Your house is still standing, has No, I have an S five.
I have such an old version.
I got a few.
Oh, that's right.
Okay, okay, cool.
So um uh and what who's your carrier?
Verizon.
Verizon.
Verizon, yeah.
Verizon.
Okay.
Um here are the colors in that.
I've got white on the front with rose gold on the back, or black.
Black would be great.
Great, great, great choice.
Okay, so you need to hang on so we can get your address at the end of the call.
Now the phone same thing.
The phone is gonna come unlocked.
It'll work uh your your SIM card and your current phone will not work in the new one because the phone you have is too old.
So you have to take this to Verizon, but they can easily move your number to it.
The phone is unlocked, it's not attached to any carrier or contract.
You tell them it's a gift, take it in the box, and they'll and they'll I'm sure they'll happily set it up for you.
And I also want to send your son a whole package of stuff from the from the Rush Revere crowd.
Oh my gosh.
Yes.
So you hang on hang hang on out there, Leanne.
We'll get your address from Mr. Snerdley and we'll get all this in the in the in the book.
You have the phone tomorrow and the other stuff next week, okay?
Thank you.
Keep doing what you're doing, sir.
Appreciate it.
Uh no, it is I who am indebted and grateful to you.
You have given a great review of the Rush Revere uh time travel adventures with exceptional Americans series, and I cannot thank you enough.
I really do appreciate it.
We'll take a brief time out after this.
Be back, don't go.
Hey, look, somebody said that it's not fear that Apple and Ford are not afraid that they see a huge opportunity to have an administration's gonna help lower their taxes and get rid of the right fine and dandy, but why did they oppose it then?
You know, I I I would love it, folks, if Apple and Ford are excited because they see an opportunity in Trump, but they campaigned against him.
You can't write that out of the equation.
They campaigned again.
They tried to do they were part of the group of people raising money and everything else to destroy Trump.
Now all of a Sudden, they see a great opportunity.
Why didn't they see it then?
Or maybe they did, but peer pressure made them unable to support Trump.
Regardless.
Ticks me off.
Here's Beth, Vernon, Connecticut.
Welcome, Beth.
Great to have you on the program.
Hi.
Hi, Rush.
Thanks for taking my call.
I have a question about my iPhone battery.
Oh, I am the expert on battery life.
What is the question?
Well, just waiting on hold for two hours.
Uh it drained down to 43%.
From 100%?
And in the last few weeks, it's been draining very quickly.
Is there a difference between listening to Rush 247 live audio stream versus downloading the podcast?
Could that be draining the battery?
Uh yeah, you you're you're browsing internet, but you it shouldn't be burning that fast no matter what you're doing, even on a small phone like that.
How often do you reboot the phone, power reboot it and all that?
Well, uh every night I just put it by the bedstand.
No, you re you actually turn it off and turn it back on?
Oh no, I I never do that on my own.
I guarantee you if you if you do that once or twice a week, uh that's the first thing you do to clear up because that you've probably got a renegade process running there in the background, refreshing something or not stopping when you close an app, and you just power the phone down, reboot it, it'll fix it.
But look, screw that.
I give everybody calling today a new phone.
So what you you have a five.
Would you like a new iPhone 7 or 7 plus?
Oh, that would be awesome.
Yeah, that's a way to fix a battery life.
So what do you want?
Seven or seven plus?
Seven plus, please.
Okay, what's your carrier?
Sprint.
Okay, it's gonna have to be black, if that's okay.
Okay.
Shiny jet black iPhone 7 plus you are gonna love you're gonna be the envy of your neighborhood.
Nobody has these.
Wow.
And should I still power it down a couple times a week?
I do, yeah.
I power it.
I never thought to do that unless you're sometimes more.
So I do all kinds of things.
My battery life on my 7 plus.
Um, just just yesterday, after with uh it had 28 hours on the phone with eight hours of usage, and I still had 70% of the battery left.
Wow, I'm not getting anything like that.
Now the battery in the 7 plus is gonna even even there was nothing wrong with your iPhone 5 battery.
The iPhone 7, you you're gonna get a day 7 plus a day and a half or two days.
More than likely.
You're certainly gonna get a full day easily with no hassle of what just described you was not gonna happen to you.
You're not gonna go from 1043 or down 43 percent in two hours and gonna hit anyway.
You don't hang on, or or do hang on so snerdly can get your address so we can get this out to you.
Um I didn't get to the San Francisco.
The headline is San Francisco Teachers Union offers Trump lesson plan.
Why kids should hate Trump?
I'm just telling you, this kind of stuff uh is gonna become rare and rare, and it's gonna stand out like a sore thumb.
And as opposed to this becoming mainstream and rah-rah, we sub these people are gonna become stigmatized and marginalized.
I think it's an opportunity here to expose what liberalism is and where it is and who they are.
Uh time will tell.
We'll take a break and be right back after this.
Oh, I told you to tell them I have to rebuild the inbox.
It's gonna take at least a half hour to screw it.
Oh.
Oh, folks, that's it.
We're out of time.
Another exciting busy broadcast week is in the can, but we will be here next week.