professor andrew bacevich struck with your comment from the change of the draft of the of military force and the fact it had on our citizens and concept of citizenship with the fact that today it seems citizens seem to be attached -- detached from policy and identify as consumers so beyond returning to a project of national service or a draft or thinking about all the other factors that lead to a citizen disengagement, if i could get both of your perspectives how do we really engage citizens as responsible members of the policy and how to be get them this stems from the fact that people do not perceive they have skin in the game the way they did during the draft or other period of our history so how do we start that historic sense of citizenship and has been lost over the last 30 or 40 years? >> it is of great question. i think implicit in the question is a recognition that at some level of problem is cultural. how is it the 99 percent are willing to sit by to allow the 1% to fight these never-ending wars? what does that say about the 99%? but then to say what do you believe? the answer