I would endorse that view. We impose sanctions on other countries in similar circumstances, so why would we have an exception for China? Given the circumstances of the last couple of years, there may have been reasons we approached China a certain way, but, to a considerable extent, those circumstances are no longer in place with respect to the two Michaels and others, so we can perhaps proceed in a more forceful fashion.
Again, it's one tool and we have a whole tool box. There are lots of different kinds of things that we can do with respect to China, both internationally and domestically, so we have to keep that in mind. While I'm a big fan of sanctions in certain circumstances, we need to look at what the ultimate outcomes are going to be and what results we're going to get from those sanctions, and keep our expectations in the right ballpark.