That's a good point.
The concept of free trade and the trade agreements have obviously become a little bit more nuanced, but I might take exception with how you characterize the Latin American view of some of it. That's not to say I disagree with a lot of what you said, but I think what we're talking about in Latin America and the economic policy is that free trade is one component of economic policy--just one component. I think a lot of what you're understanding in Latin America about some dissent or some discomfort is with the whole neo-liberal model, as it's been called—whatever that means—or the Washington consensus. When you're talking about equity and trying to bridge the chasms between the haves and the have-nots, it's not all at the feet of free trade, not by a long shot.
Chile, which has had involvement in free trade agreements, has supplemented its economic policy, and it's a very neo-liberal model, with—