 Ben Oslohamsen, thank you very much for being with us with WPC-TV, you're a professor of international relations at Carter University in Ottawa, the capital of Canada, but I want to ask you a question about American foreign policy. How do you view it? I think the United States, John, is experiencing a crisis of confidence among its key allies and that includes its neighbors like Canada and Mexico in terms of its ability to lead, to lead with a strong, coherent vision of how it sees the world, a very turbulent world moving forward. Whether it's in the Middle East, Syria, we've seen flip-flops, we've seen a weekend at the tiller when it comes to dealing with Russia and Vladimir Putin's incursions into Ukraine, when it comes to the so-called pivot to Asia, it strikes many as more of a pirouette than a pivot, and we're also, I think, worried as friends of the United States about an America that has turned inward on itself, is preoccupied with obviously major domestic problems, and quite frankly doesn't seem all that interested in not only its friends but dealing with major world issues. Is this a criticism of President Obama himself, or is it a function also of a reaction to the activism or the maximalism of the George W. Bush years, or is it also a function of political gridlock in Washington? I think it's all three, I mean gridlock and intransigent Congress is a fact of life. When you look back at some of the problems that Franklin Delano Roosevelt had to deal with when it came to his Congress, you know, the reality is in a division of powers there are going to be difficulties, particularly if the party of the other side dominates one or both houses in Congress. But I think the fundamental problem does lie in the White House, as Harry Truman said once the buck stops here and the buck does stop in the White House and quite frankly not a whole lot happens when it lands and when problems land on the desk of the President. It's said that he doesn't like to negotiate with Congress, well he doesn't seem to really be all that interested in negotiating with his friends and friends that the United States needs if it's going to be an effective global player. Fennos L. Hampson, thank you very much for that very sobering judgment on President Obama. Thank you. My pleasure, John.