It's definitely real. I mean, I switched the whole, like, I made new, I installed new lights, and I know that it's not something that most women would know how to do, but I learned how to do it because my dad would always do the work by himself around the house, and I would be sitting next to him and helping him out and learning how to do it, so now I'm with a man who really doesn't have nothing but to rest on the weekends because he has a chick at home who knows how to fix stuff around the house, which he finds extremely convenient because he works really hard and he's tired. Well, and if he's working, I appreciate that.
And I like everything you say. Chief, can I ask you a question? My heart has been on this, especially when it comes to the immigration question and a lot of the propaganda that goes along with it. Who's going to work these things? It's all racist, bigoted stuff, and we're talking about rate of recidivism, and we're talking about stabilization of people coming maybe out of jail or going into these work programs.
And listen, I live in Arizona, so the Sheriff Joe Arpaio tent city stuff, I know all about that, but it's closing the gap and trying to actually kind of go in what we're talking about here, teaching a trade.
What are the biggest hurdles? So if I were sitting in front of a Congress member or members of the Senate, sometimes I do, or staffers, we're asking the question of what we should propose in regards to this to bridge the gap. Other than addiction, we all know that.
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