I am an eternal optimist and I hope that we will succeed. If blame needs to be laid afterward, I think that we will all have a collective responsibility for not adequately respecting the reality of linguistic duality. I will be just as responsible as our VANOC colleagues, the federal government and the Canadian public as a whole, which won't have given us enough support for us to succeed.
I don't think that blame can be attached to one particular individual or organization. However, if we need to point fingers, then people will be responsible to varying degrees, because if the opening and closing ceremonies are kept secret until the last minute and ultimately we realize there are problems, I might be less to blame than VANOC and perhaps also than the people who oversee VANOC at that level.
I think that VANOC clearly learned its lesson following an incident that occurred a year before the Games. It had a great impact on the in-house group. It wasn't a pleasant experience; they heard about it constantly, as did you, the media and the Canadian public at large. But I think they learned their lesson and I hope they will remember it.