schools. she's 83 years old and still goes to school every day. she looked at me one day and said son i never thought i'd have a child august 1963, two days after the march on washington, who would be facing some of the same kind of challenges we faced them, but she got that e-mail, and that squint, and you-all better fight. my momma told me don. and so we've been -- people told us we were going to lose. they told us we couldn't beat them. they spent $6 million of our taxpayer money trying to take the right to vote and a bridge to vote. we went to jail, we stood and we went to courts and we won and we have to use this victory by voting. i tell folks, momma said you better vote. >> you always listen to mom a. listen i went to the barber shop today and she sad i like your hair short, and i said my momma likes it when i have more hair on my head, she wants, momma said, and momma's always right. >> that's right. >> thank you, i appreciate it.