so, we're trying to put unprecedented resources on the table, but we're asking for unpress daenth refocedented. we really have to get dramatically better, but there isn't a state in the country -- i've met with every governor and every school chief and asked them a question, how many of you have conquered the dropout problem? how many of you do you feel you have enough high school graduates and ultimately college graduates? and the room always gets dead silent. lots of progress, lots of momentum, lots of, you know, interesting models to learn from and replicate. no one is there yet. and so, by definition, if no one's there, we're not close to being there as a country. so, to see a place like south carolina, when the inequities in funding are devastating and where the dropout rate is scarily high and when children simply because of the poor education have no chance of entering the mainstream society and being successful, where the education system in too many places in south carolina is a part of the problem, for the governor or anyone else to say that those children1x don't deserve more and do