Did you catch this exchange on this week's episode of Blabbermouth?

Eli Sanders: During this discussion time between rounds one and rounds two, do we have to let all, say, 100 people discuss or will people be cut off? In other words, is this gonna drag on all day or does the person who's running the show—this is just a yes or no here—do they have the power to cut people off when it's gotten to be enough?

Jaxon Ravens, Chair of the Washington State Democratic Party: No. There's not, like, a cutoff time.

Oh my god.

Ravens: I mean, it's a group of neighbors having this conversation and, you know, it'll go back and forth. But I imagine that the consensus of the group is not gonna be to, you know, go back and forth on this conversation for 12 hours.

As someone who spends a lot of time at public meetings, I have less faith in the speechmaking public than Ravens does.

He goes on to explain that he believes the caucuses are going to be totally sensible, unlike the vitriol we've seen exchanged between Bernie Sanders supporters and Hillary Clinton supporters online.

My guess is that there'll be a couple speakers on one side and a couple speakers on the other side, and people will have other things that they want to do during the day. And there will be some people that will say well, you know, let's have some coffee after this. I'd love to talk more about this issue.

There might be a couple places where they decide they want to have a longer conversation, but my guess is most places are gonna have just a reasonable discourse between the two sides.

Can we just settle this right here, as a people? Nobody talks for longer than 5 minutes and we wrap this thing up by lunch. Deal? Find your caucus location and pre-register right here and learn more about what to expect once you get there by listening to Blabbermouth.