mr. dan murphy whose son was killed in afghanistan. dan, would you like to add anything? no, you spent a lot of time keeping the memory of your son alive. >> thank you. i'm in a lot different position than most. i have three living recipients here. i not only lost my son, but he also lost most of his s.e.a.l.s team. so i see things from a different perspective. what i can tell you and what i notice in my time dealing with others that have received the medal of honor, whether pos humusly or alive, not just their courage, but the fact that like michael, they all thought something higher than just of themselves. they thought of others, and that their overriding principle was not so much what happened to them but what was happening to their men, and i think that's kind of the perspective that i bring. i know what mike did and why he did it, and i get a better perspective, understanding what these three men and why they did what they did. [ applause ] >> well, ladies and gentlemen, i think we'll wrap it up now. thank you for asking that question. added great dimension to what