I think the government is trying to intimidate its opponents, and I see that across the board in some very subtle ways. What I hear is that it's really the lower-profile cases that are even stronger, that the government knows that in dealing with a high-profile lawyer there may have to be some legalistic manner where they actually have some evidence, but with the maybe lower-level cases they can get away with it more.
If I could expand that theme more broadly for just 60 seconds, because I know we're limited, I think that the problem for the Chavez government is not the opposition or opposition judiciaries. It may be growing opposition within his own party, the PSUV. Over the last year, the vice-president of the PSUV resigned in protest. Another major supporter of the PSUV, the governor of Lara, resigned, suggesting that Chavez is a megalomaniac, that he wants to concentrate power in himself, that it's more about himself than the revolution, that there's not enough internal debate. So politically, I think we're not only talking about opposition members who are becoming dissatisfied, but about people within his own party, and I think that would be a serious concern.
If I could take another couple of seconds, there's a growing group of people I hear who find themselves alienated not only by government policies but also by opposition policies. That is, so far the opposition has appealed largely to the upper class and the middle class, but has not yet appealed to the masses of people who are poor or recently poor. There's a group among them who are tired of 11 years of the same guy as president and other abuses, for some of the reasons we've discussed, but still don't feel like they can relate to the opposition parties. They're a group called the Ni, which means neither. They have not yet been organized and do not have a leader. I would suggest that in the future that would be an important opposition, in addition to problems within the government's own party.