so wherever you are, senator gregg -- and i know you're happier than you are here -- i would offer my appreciation and my thanks. i note the presence of dr. barrasso here. and i think there's something we ought to really understand about the class act. it did have a short-term impact, according to the way that the congressional budget office -- quote -- "scores things" -- tells us how much things will add or detract from the deficit, either plus or minus, and the fact is that the class act, in the first ten years -- because younger people would be paying in in premiums and not going to the point where they were eligible for the benefits -- it disguised the cost of what we know now, what we call obamacare. and so because of the way they are restricted on scoring, the class act, at least for ten years, contributed $70 billion and helped them estimate that the health care reform act known as obamacare would have $122 billion in savings when in reality, after the first ten-year period, it was tens of billions of dollars in added deficit and burdens on average americans. so i would ask my colleague, senator barrasso, dr. barrasso, isn't there