Security is certainly a linchpin. It's a very difficult issue. Of course, you have American guns being used for organized crime here in Mexico. The money that is being used to corrupt our local police officers is also coming from this narco traffic. What ends up happening is that narco traffic, with its very powerful economic strength, comes into these localities, into these municipalities. We have municipal police forces. They come in and they corrupt the entire system. Once that's done, the proposal is, “Lead or silver?” In other words, “I can either kill you and your family, or I can make you rich; it's important for me to make you rich because I need to make you an accomplice to me.”
I think we spend too much time thinking about corruption as if it were just a question of people actually taking bribes. The “lead” part of the equation—that is, the part of the equation that says that I will riddle you with bullets—is often far more dangerous for the rule of law. That's what's going on, and basically it's being financed by drug money. Once they establish those outlets, they franchise. They franchise into kidnapping. They franchise into extortion and all of that racket. That's something we need to look at very clearly.
With respect to continental security, all our visa laws—