I recognize that it's not over. The concern that I would have, and that I think thousands of people who've been represented by civil society groups and others have, is that under the scenario you've just described, it gets presented to everyone as a fait accompli: here's the deal; we didn't have the opportunity, or we couldn't provide it to you, all along the way, but here's the agreement at the end. It's done on a take-it-or-leave-it basis.
On the copyright-related issues, maybe some of the issues I've just outlined aren't in the agreement and maybe some are. Maybe some of Ms. Des Chênes' issues are adequately addressed and maybe they're not. The position that's taken is that it's an agreement and you have to live with it.
What I'm saying is that on these copyright issues—you heard previously about patent, and we could talk about domain names—I think they'll have a significant negative effect. That's why I'm taking the position that it would be enormously problematic if that's where the TPP took us.