mr. eisenbrey? guest: clinton raised the minimum wage. if we go back to that policy, i'm happy to see that. this was in 1996, the minimum wage was increased, and unemployment fell sharply after that. in fact, we have the lowest unemployment rate basically of my lifetime. it fell to 4% on a yearly basis and actually below. we had full employment after we had the minimum wage increase. any argument based on history about the minimum wage has to admit that there has been no evidence that a minimum wage increase causes unemployment. guest: two things. worst of all, look at the heavy government regulations in europe and the higher unemployment rate. secondly, if we are going to have this deal to go back to clinton policies, which i'm willing to do, ross has to understand the other side of the deal. government spending has to fall under gdp, government regulations. a lot of the big government policies that we have had under bush and obama undermine the more pro-market direction the country was heading in under clinton. even though i think a min