joe: jonathan bernstein, bloomberg view columnist, thank you very much.oming up, president trump' firing of james comey may raise eyebrows, but it is not clear if anyone in the markets care. for more on the markets and what is going on in a d.c., stay tuned next. this is bloomberg. ♪ joe: what'd you miss? firing of fbip's director james comey adds to political uncertainty in washington, along with health care, tax reform, infrastructure, north korea. but there is little evidence that the market is concerned with any of it. why not?for more on how political risks interact with the market, george, welcome back to the show. it has been too long. why doesn't the market care about any of this? we get extraordinary headlines, everyone would have to admit, since election, and people think it is going to matter. it never seems to matter. answer that question is to ask in response, why should the market care? andets like stability strong institutions, but those are the things you could frame the comey firing through 10 to matter in the long run as opposed to the s