they read john kashich as saying -- he is a sincere person, believes in restricting corporate welfareat the time he even criticized the blooded -- bloated military budget but it would not move to the legislative stage. governor kashich of ohio received three letters from me when he was elected and afterwards, saying, now you can do something about corporate welfare at the state level, and i've received no answer. now, that's because there is no infrastructure for convergence to push these matters further. when i was debating milton freedman, i got him to agree that there should be regulation of pollution. he didn't think there should be licensing for doctors. he thought the american medical association was the worst cartel but agreed there should be regulation against pollutants, much of which you can't see, sense, long-range damage, all the rest of it. not exactly market choice. i was debating ronald reagan once, and i challenged him on corporate subsidies, and he came right back and he said, i always tell my friends in the business world, not to put their hand in the washington trou