Okay.
You started to get into--and I found this an extraordinarily curious statement by Ms. Keen when she was in front of the committee--the one-in-a-thousand chance of something going wrong. I didn't fully understand what she was meaning there, because to me there is a difference between a one-in-a-thousand year and a one-in-a-thousand chance.
So perhaps you would elaborate a little bit more--in many ways, I'm asking you to go over the same ground as you just did--on the probability of something happening at the plant. This is a point that needs to be stressed over and over again. What is the probability? It wasn't one in a thousand. There is no international standard of one in a million. What is the probability of something major going wrong prior to these pumps being backed up seismically with the electrical system? What is the probability under the old situation?