Even if you maybe can't get to it in your first term, these things need to be addressed. Because there is a lot of people that are affected by these things, and they just don't talk out because they're afraid. They're really afraid to.
SourceAnd I think we have a window. I know it will take time, but if you think about it, Trump's president, next year is 2026. So this is the window for California.
I think it's now, so I'm totally with you on that. Okay, I really don't know who's next. Mike, I think it's a super.
I thought it was DJ. It's super. Can you mute your visit already? Music is on.
Sometimes it was muted. I'll mute it back. All right.
Sorry, man. I was just some feedback. Right now.
Go ahead, DJ. And I appreciate your patience. Oh, yeah.
No, no worries. Thanks for the opportunity to be here. I appreciate both you and Mike.
Yeah, I just I want to kind of double click on what Barbie, Delta and Shane were all talking about. Because, I mean, like I said, I left in 2018 when Brown was governor and I'd been there for since I was a lad. So I think part of the problem is that a lot of Californians had suffered from preference falsification.
And to all three of their points, what this most recent election showed was the preference cascade where so many of them realized, like, okay, I'm not alone anymore. I'm not in the minority like I hear propagated all the time in the news. And Mike was right.