are here, and, of course, 10% of the people that live here in the nation's capital do not have health insurance, so bottom line here, buddy, we've got a long way to go as a country. >> the other thing that occurs to me as i look at what you're doing today and what has gone on at health fairs in the past, and i think about how expensive our health care is, the fee-for-service model, the insurance monopolies, the multi-billion dollar bonuses paid to health insurance executives, the cost per patient of treating people inside of the unreformed health insurance monopoly. can you give us any insight as to how much it costs to deal with a patient at a situation like the one there? and i don't know if we have the numbers, but my suspicion it's pennies on the dollar to provide health care to people when you get a direct relationship between patients and doctors and get all this thievery and monopoly and extraction out of there. >> well, the cost is human life, and the cost is these americans here who don't have insurance,