joining me now back at the table is katon dawson, senior adviser to winning future.g newt gingrich of he's already the former chairman of the south carolina republican party and heather beau shea, senior economist at the center for american progress. heather, i said earlier, this is a legitimate question for me. i'm a political scientist. i can fix -- i would say don't call me a doctorment call me professor. i can't fix your medical problems. i can talk to you about all sorts of things. but this one i really want an economist to tell me. why don't we just raise the cap. why at 110, 100 why not at 200. why not 400. why not on all earning and it doesn't have to be 4.2%. it can be over the 110 cap. we could be at 3% or 2.5%, right? and wouldn't that make social security solvent? >> it's a great question. i'm really glad you asked and i'm glad you asked within the context of the payroll tax cut that is being signed into law. so what we're doing is saying, okay, we're going to borrow a little bit, we're going to give people, put some money in their hands right now and tak