one of our reporters in china, keith richburg, is spending full time on their equivalent of twitter, just monitoring the social discourse april talks about. information is abundant. so that's on the political-social level. on the business or economic front, you know, when i first moved to hong kong in 1984, there were these jesuits in hong kong. they had been convicted by the communists in 1949 and had gone to hong kong and set up camp there. they were reporting on china, trying to get the facts right out of china. they would go down to the calvin railway station and try to figure out the state of the pepper -- petrochemical business in china. that is very different. they probably have people dedicated to covering the state of the petrochemical business in china. that is not in anyway to say it is easy today. and people will be able to assume this. i sense there is a closing down of access. china is getting impatient with the way things are being handled. >> it is sort of astounding, as you think about it, the president of china is -- has never given an interview i think to any journ