Again, just to reinforce your point that cutting wages alone is not going to solve this problem whatsoever, you could say, in fact, on one hand, that it will make things worse. The ultimate problem of this immediate crisis is that people are not buying cars. If industries widespread--not just auto companies, but industries throughout the economy--start cutting their own wages in response to this downturn, that is part of what happened in the 1930s. Then you get a downward spiral in purchasing power, which prevents consumer spending from recovering.
Again, we committed to being part of the solution. We also committed that our labour costs would remain fully competitive, and we have done that. But we don't claim for a minute that what we've done in the contract can somehow save the company or save the industry. That's where we need the bigger response.