-- haroldic keyes, i think, who was his interior secretary and a republican, by the way, but a veryprogressive one. and vincent astor was in the room, and he was a very, very close personal friend of fdr's and one of the original 400, i think, of ward mcallister's great term. and fdr was reading this out, and he got to the point where he said this is what i'm going to do to taxes on the wealthy, and astor sort of said, well, you know, franklin, i'm one of those people. and roosevelt sort of looked at him and said, well, you're going to have to pay too, vincent. [laughter] so, but this leads me into a question i wanted to ask you, nomi, which is that in all of the period that you covered going back, as i said, to the dawn of the 20th century it seems to me, and you can check me if i'm wrong on this, that there was really only one period in which there really was a successful campaign for wall street and banking regulation, and that was the '30s. when we got the securities act of 1933 and of 1934, we got the sec, we got disclosures of corporate finances, we got, we brought the new yor