and otis moss looked out at that crowd of young pople and he said, the happit day of my life was whenn she was first eligible, and we walked into these voting booths together, and i pulled the curtains on mine, and i pulled the -- i heard her pull the curtain on hers, and before i voted, i put my ear to the edge, until i could hear her pull the voting levers. and he said, he said, in my family, we do not miss voting. we are there every time the polls are open. so i say to all of you who are here, you need to talk to your friends about this. i keep reading that young people are not quite as sure as they were four years ago they're going to vote. i tried to argue down in charlotte last week that that's a bad mistake. we've got a lot of reasons to vote. and we've got a good candidate to vote for. and we need to get out here and do that. and besides, if you sit on the sidelines, you are responsible for the consequences. and the next time somebody says, oh, i wish that or the other thing hadn't have happened, if you sat on the sidelines, you contributed to it happening. the whole purpose o