Well, this is why this issue of why is job growth slow? We don't have job growth at the moment, but why has job growth been slow going into the shutdown? Is it simply because of less immigration? Because if there's less immigration, then for the fed, that doesn't mean anything. They should just say, well, there's less immigration, but that doesn't mean the economy is slowing down. Or is it because there is a slowdown going on where the economy is slowing rapidly and therefore labor demand is weaker? So the key question here becomes for the fed, especially going into the meeting here in 2 or 3 weeks time, is exactly this issue is the slowdown in the labor market because of slower supply, or is the slowdown because of lower demand? And if it is simply lower supply, border encounters are basically zero. And I think that there is a much more likely story that this is not driven so much by slowdown in the economy. You still have strong growth when it comes to Red book, same store retail sales. The weaker data we get is still strong. The daily data for how many people go to restaurants from OpenTable is still strong. You also have weaker data from staff or hotel. Demand is also very strong, both consumers and for businesses across the country. So it is exactly as you're saying, Mike, very inconsistent that the labor market is slowing. But why is it consumption CapEx spending in particular is still so strong, and that suggests that it is actually still the case that GDP and the economy is actually doing still well.