No, I don't think it does. The comment from Mr. Miller highlights that. Just because you get to go to Bogota, Colombia, on a junket to see a set-up from the government on what's happening.... It's not the real world. If you want to talk about what the real world is, you should go and talk to the Colombians themselves, without a set-up.
These agreements that have been signed, all of them that have been signed by these right-wing governments, are giving more rights to individual corporations that don't have the ability to be sympathetic to human rights or other rights. They have the ability to make money. Some of them are good at it and some of them aren't. The ones that are good at it don't pay attention to anything else.
I was in Shenzhen, China, and I met a 15-year-old boy who lost his hand because of a question that was asked by the manager, who was taught by the free enterprise system, what's cheaper, fixing the boy's hand or amputating it? Amputation was cheaper. That's the question that gets answered.
We negotiate with these corporations every day. We know you have to put limits on them. You have to put safety on the bargaining table. Even though they know it's not good to hurt people, if you don't put it on the bargaining table, they don't do it, because they're not capable of it. The problem with these agreements is that some of these people believe corporations can be socially responsible. They can't. They don't have the structure to do that. We have to temper them through a union structure or through a government structure.
The problem with these agreements is that some governments believe they can abdicate all of their rights and give them to corporations to do it for them, and they don't.