The short answer is that we're working in a number of venues to encourage parliaments and governments to take action. It has not been as widespread as we would hope yet, but it is becoming an increasingly important conversation in various congresses and parliaments in Europe, as well as in the United States and Canada.
To go back to a discussion that we had a couple of minutes ago, in order to affect what's going on in Hong Kong, in China, on human rights and the kinds of issues that we're concerned about in raising them today, it is really important that the countries that share the values that are under attack in Hong Kong, in China, come together with a common view of how to deal with them and respond to them. This goes to everything from the economic issues we were discussing earlier, the trade issues, the commercial contacts which are under attack in Hong Kong as well, to the human rights in media and other issues.
The more that all of our countries can move towards a common understanding, not just of what is happening in Hong Kong, which is a major point of what we're trying to do, but also how to respond to it, the stronger the sense will be of not just support for Hong Kong but the message that will be sent to what is really, the core of all this, which is the Communist leadership in Beijing. They need to understand that what they are trying to do in rewriting the story of Hong Kong is not something that is going to just be accepted by those of us who care about the values that they are trying to discard there.