Okay, thank you.
Also, Mr. Gutmann, you mentioned before that the economic aspect of this—I can't remember the words you used—is not as much of an issue as.... I would ask you to comment, or I'm going to challenge that a bit, for the simple reason that throughout history we've seen how various dominant cultures have used one form or another of inhumanity toward humans—for example, slavery in America—as an economic driver for their countries.
It seems to me that the skill set—if you'll forgive—that the Chinese are building, even in the experimentation of drugs, pharmaceuticals, and things of this nature, is tantamount to what the Nazis did in the concentration camps, to the economic boon of what slavery was to America, and to what's happening in various other countries right now in terms of cheap or no-paid labour.
So to have this literal treasure trove of organs available on demand is a massive economic storehouse. The economics of this can't be overlooked. I think, first and foremost, cutting down on economic tourism, drying up that aspect of the economic boon to China, is something we can do in the west. We can say that our people cannot go there and contribute to this situation by bypassing our laws and going to China to get organs.
Would you comment on that?