well, some of you know the book by hugh gregory gallagher published in the 1980s, "fdr's public deception." it's a good book. gallagher was severely disabled by polio himself. the title is unfortunate. it's a good title to sell books. it's not a very accurate title. because of that word, "deception." you read the book carefully, you realize that gallagher's argument is fairly measured. he's talking -- i don't think he, if he were sitting here, i don't think he'd disagree with me very much. he's passed away. i think that got the ball rolling. and i think that my comrades in the media picked up that ball and ran with it. and when we see a documentary film about fdr on, and the biography channel and other channels like that that will go unnamed, we see a kind of embrace of the idea that this is what presidents do, they deceive. okay? the secret service, man, i read that quote, it just made me laugh. oh, really? the secret service didn't want the public to know that franklin roosevelt, who founded the march of dimes to to campaign against polio, whose birthday was celebrated every year by peo