that to me -- now, i didn't go to harvard like miky -- i went to the a school, not the b school, wharton. that means that greece has basically defaulted already, so i think it was totally a nonevent. i think it there were other influences that led to the decline. >> what's your biggest influence? what's your biggest influence? >> i think a combination of negative data points, more ambiguous economic statistics, both here and abroad, abroad meaning china, europe, and india, and here the income and spending, personal spending numbers late last week combined with the national ism actually ended up having goldman sachs' economics department reduce the first quarter gdp quarter price by 2%. >> on the other , mike, if you take out the greek credit event or the potential there, we've had a tremendous run-up for five months. something like 25%. we are due for a pullback, are we not? has your thinking changed now after today's 200 point sell-off? >> my thinking has not changed, larry, and hello, doug. the answer to the original question, what took the market down toes, as doug said, was not greec