I wonder how troubled you are by the revelations about this data breach at Facebook, the use of people’s private — our what they believe to be private — information by folks who were not supposed to have it in the election? It’s disturbing to think that there was the disclosure of private information. And then also disturbing to see how that information — or how the platform — was used. When I was out in Wisconsin campaigning for a Wisconsin Supreme Court Justice candidate, there were indications that the Russians were using the shooting of a black man there to try to foment discord and to try to use it in an electoral way for candidates who they wanted to support. If the Russians had access to American social media platforms, ability to get data on individual Americans, and to advertise to them or direct bots at them with messages of division basically unregulated, does that say to you that the government needs to step in on these platforms? There needs to be a real, a substantive interaction between people who run these platforms and people who pass the laws so that we can come up with a scheme that will protect people from the kind of breaches that have occurred. The conversations that we have about the conduct of this president, they are mind-blowing. People are giving evangelicals, giving Trump a pass on this one, and that one, and that one. I really just don’t understand how this has not had the reaction that would’ve been generated by, I think, any other president — not just President Obama. If President Bush had done these kinds of things that would have been the end of his presidency. So in 2012 you announced there were not going to be any prosecutions related to the Bush era interrogation and torture programs. And you now have — the president has nominated Gina Haspel for CIA director. She’s somebody who was involved in those programs. Although we couldn’t make criminal cases, there are lessons that should be learned from that America should never do. America should never do what was done during the time period that we examined. So declassifying that to the extent that that’s possible, try to deal with the grand jury secrecy issues, try to declassify, and put this stuff out there so that — not just in connection with this nomination. American people need to know what exactly happened during that time period. John Paul Stevens said this week that we ought to talk about repealing the Second Amendment and should that be on the table as part of the gentleman’s question? I think, with all due respect to Justice Stevens, I’m not sure that we should be focusing our efforts on repealing the Second Amendment because I think that’s not a realistic goal. So I’m not sure I would agree with Justice Stevens, but there is clearly a need for us to address what is a gun violence epidemic in the United States.