distinguished visiting scholar of the economics program of the advanced international studies at john hopkins anaging ty and recently left the director. if you have any questions that you might want to lob in here, you can email them to jan hopkins@questions@econclub.org. gentlemen. >> mr. secretary, thank you very much for being here tonight. one of my favorite geithner quotes is we save the economy, but we lost the public in doing it. we spoke to the first half of that in your remarks but not the second. i'm not looking to draw you back then. but rather to get your thoughts on whether it's possible and if so how to get the public back. >> it's first remembering that people saw their lives up ended by a set of choices mostly they did not make. and they saw the world burning around them. a broad run on the first time in memory that people faced the risk of losing their savings or this depth of loss and wealth and employment. and the they saw the government forced to act to rescue the people they thought were responsible fairly on unfairly. and they were angry. understandably angry and scared and frus