2013, andestified in as much as things change, things stay the same. in 2013, we were concerned about changes to terrible giving avenues. any piece of legislation that limits the ability of people to give funds to journal organizations -- charitable organizations is something the national organization at our counterparts in the journal sector cannot support. specifically for us, we would support a universal deduction for charities. rather than doubling the standard deduction for people. not only really incentivizes the top 1% to be giving. we know for a fact that 40% of our donors of thomas -- have told us they would not donate any longer is in the house bill. 40% of those. if you think about 44% of our clinics have an operating budget of $100,000 or lower. if they lose 40% of their donors, that makes them shut their doors and then we have a health care gap, and more people go to the emergency room to receive health care. host: this shows the five largest u.s. tax inductions, state and local taxes, the second, mortgage and student loan interest in the