johnson: mr. loman? mr. loman: yes. my issue is almost never with the actual research, but the way those findings get politicized and misrepresented by groups to say that hydraulic fracturing -- even though we are talking about a completely separate process -- when they use that to build a case for banning fracking. on the issue of seismicity, i always go back to some testimony that was presented to the united states senate a couple years ago by one of the nations leading geophysicists, affair for university geophysicist. -- a stanford university geophysicist. he went against the obama administration on this issue, he just wanted to put it in perspective. for instance, he said that there are more than 140,000 of these wastewater disposal wells used by the oil and gas industry, but other industries too. the vast majority of those have been operating safely for decades. it is the context and it is the lack of a factual discussion of the research that i take issue with and i hear about all the time from geologists inside t