Fair enough, but with that said, the reality is, yes, there is a rethinking of aspects of how free trade agreements work, how the trickle down is working or not, and what the chasm is between the haves and the have-nots. Not all of that can be hung on free trade agreements; there are a whole lot of other issues that affect how the economies have been working.
With all of that said, the Latin American countries are pushing for free trade agreements. It's not as if they're backing away from it. Uruguay, which is run by a former Tupamaro guerrilla, is pushing hard to have a free trade agreement with the U.S. right now, and there are discussions going on. Lula, and you know his background, is very much for free trade agreements. Their big sticking issue is with agricultural issues, but it's not a recoiling from the concept of having free trade agreements. It's the same thing in Central America, the same thing in Peru, with Alan Garcia, who is from the left. It's an acknowledgement that issues have to be worked out, but at its base it's a concept that needs to be explored and finalized.