Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Actually, I think it's a very good closing angle that we have here with Mr. Calandra's question.
I am wondering about one thing. Really, do the countries that have the best performance in the Paralympic Games deal better with the fact that disabled athletes are different? Do they have a better relationship with disabled people in general in society?
We have talked a lot about sports and all that, but the truth is that our relationship with people with disabilities is not easy. People do not feel drawn. People already feel uncomfortable, so are they going to watch those sports on TV?
For instance, should we not come up with an initiative where you have a person with two legs and a person in a wheelchair play basketball against each other, until one of them gets their butt kicked, if you will pardon the expression, gets beaten? Isn’t that what we should look for?
However, the main question has more to do with figuring out if, in general, on a daily basis, the performance of a disabled person is more accepted in the countries that had a good performance in the Games.