we're back with grover norquist and robert reish. grover, i saw a figure yesterday that leapt out at me from the newspaper pages. home sales jumping to the highest level in more than two years in august, up 7.8%, coming at the time the stock market is being roaring up as well, and a small but perhaps significant drop in the unemployment benefits as well, by 3,000. all these are fairly encouraging indicators, albeit in an overall rather depressed economic situation. but the momentum appears to be behind barack obama at the moment. you must be worried, aren't you? >> no. if we looked at last -- this month's unemployment numbers, 300,000, 400,000 people left the work force. unemployment fell not because the number of people getting jobs, but because the number of people who quit looking. if barack obama's economy had recovered as strongly as reagan's did from the bottom of the recession, we would have ten million more americans at work. reagan took a different approach, spend less, not more, lower taxes, less regulation. obama did the o