I go back to the European example, where you have a common market, a common currency in Europe. We don't have a common market. We saw it in the softwood lumber situation, where we made an agreement that I didn't think was very good.
I agree fully with you that the Americans have been totally out of control. I think that Bush is the worst president in American history, personally, and I would rather do something else. But I do believe that we cannot permit them to beggar us and have us make obsolete trillions of dollars of industrial investment over 60 years.
We have to get through that. We cannot allow these industries to be bankrupted, and we cannot help them with government money during these periods to stay alive, waiting for the time when the dollar goes down again, for the simple reason that the cyclical industries and the commodities go back down in price, which they have always done before. I do believe that we have to have stability for our industries in these periods. And however much I agree with you on the suitability of the American central government and of Mr. Greenspan, who never saw a bubble he didn't like, I think we have no other alternative.