starting the economy's paul, you have a terrific editorial on germany that they are reopening but seeing increasing and you also discuss elon musk, i mean, he's become -- you say he's the howardnessmen yelling out, i'm not going take it up anymore, i'm not going to close, i have 10,000 employees, we are going to get out there and work. what do you say about what he's doing and the way he's being defiant? paul: i think he has got his way. his argument is desperate treatment, he can open battery plant in one location but he couldn't open assembly plant in alameda and he said it wasn't safe, wait a minute, michigan is now opening for my competitors ford and general motors, i can open some of my plants but i can't open the others, why is that? he's looking at the arbitrary nature of the decisions and he's understandably frustrated because a lot -- i think a lot of the frustration you're seeing among the american people relate to the arbitrariness, you have politicians making decisions who don't seem to be based as much on the science as they are on protecting, overprotecting i would argue in some cases for -- for the virus, so i think he shouted and shouted and looks like he's ge