1995, we voted 100% Catholic since 1995. And when I said they took control of, they had representatives in every voting precinct by 1995, please understand this. They started in 1989. Six years later, they have representatives in every voting precinct. In the United States, the different states are divided up into precincts for voting purposes. And the Republican and Democratic Party have been in existence for, both of them, for over 100 years. They've never, either one of them, have ever had a time in their history where they had representatives in every voting precinct in the United States. But the Christian coalition, within six years, had representatives in all of them. And their power is misunderstood by many. People aren't recognizing how powerful they are, but we're going to look at that. But why is it even important to understand what their power is all about? Here's one way to try to bring this into focus. This is a statement by Pat Robertson, who's the head of the Christian coalition. He made this in an address in 1993 to the American Center for Law and Justice. He says, now remember what we've been talking about this evening. There is no such thing as separation of church and state in the Constitution. It is a lie of the left, and we're not going to take it anymore. See, the head of the Christian coalition doesn't believe in the separation of church and state. It's one of his fundamental principles. And he's clear that if there ever comes a point in time when the Christian coalition truly has control of the Congress, that he's going to do away with it. Now, what did we read just a little while ago out of the great controversy? That when the religious bodies so control the Congress, that the Congress will do its bidding, the United States has formed an image of the beast. Well, the evidence is pretty conclusive now that that religious right body is controlling them. There's just a few more steps they're going to have to take in order to start doing the bidding that we understand to be the Sunday law. This is from this very magazine I referred to on the later issue, Church and State, November 1999. It says this. Religious right groups have significant power in US politics, says scholar William Martin at Rice University, sociologist and author, not because most Americans agree with them, but because voter turnout in presidential and congressional elections hovers at around 50% and is even lower in state and local races. And if you heard anything about the American elections, once again, about 50% of the people that can vote do vote. That's what happened this year. Continuing on, the religious political movement accounts for only about 17% of the American electorate. It's not like they are the majority.