I'm sorry about that.
Last year we saw the consensus-building process in the U.S. across political aisles, which made the Hong Kong issue one of the very few topics that both parties could agree on and then process in a traumatic space. I've been doing international advocacy work but mainly focusing on Europe, and I think that kind of consensus-building process has been ongoing in Europe for at least the past couple of months. If we are going to work together as liberal democracies, then we have to really consolidate our China policy, and definitely see China as very aggressively expansionist power, and adopt measures such as building up policies on Huawei and state enterprises from China, and also, for example, on really imminent issues like boycotting the Winter Olympics. We could send a really clear signal that we're not going to follow the old path of engagement and appeasement policy, but are going to be very assertive and proactive as countries, which—