 Ana, I don't even want to introduce you, you've been everything. So Ana Palacio, over to you. Well, you know, I had an idea to say a few things that I'm not going to say, because I think that, thank you, Hubert. You have really presented what there is there for us. So I will make three comments. The first comment, I will go take the lens back from the sit-in. In my opinion, what is more puzzling with our citizens, which has a repercussion in our system, in our political system, there's this growth of the illiberals, is that Europe is the place of rationality. Rationality comes from the Enlightenment, and we are supposed to make choices based on the interest. What we see today is the invasion everywhere of the irrationality, of the emotional, and this we have to analyze. And all our instruments are geared, because in the end, we are a legal construction. All our system is a legal construction. And legality is about predictability, and it's about certainty. And the opposed to predictability and certainty is emotions. And so this is, for me, one issue in which we have to reflect and reflect deeply. If I take the lens a bit further, I think that we have, and I won't go into it in our governance, national, because we still are states. Even if some of us would like to be somewhere else, we are states. In our states, we have this challenge on how to transform classical party systems that are classical agendas and that comes from the first challenge. But of course, when we go to the European level, I agree with Mr. Bervedrin, we should, this is in our interest, create une Europe puissance. Absolutely clear. But honestly, we have to realize that our citizens do not follow on this idea of building more Europe. And you know what? We are in an intergovernmental moment in the European Union. The crisis in the commission is many things. First of them is the reflect of this intergovernmental moment when groups, the PPP, the group, the PSC group, the classical groups that made it forward, that by agreeing, by having a big discipline, are completely splintered. My third comment, taking the lens, is honestly, this is not any longer a world and it's difficult to adapt it. I mean, it's not a European, it's not a Western world. And you know, we say this, but we haven't interiorized this. So we have either the panic reaction or the overreaction. But I mean, Kevin, I think that we have to have clear eyes of what's coming. And what's coming is exactly what you have said. So our dependence on the United States, our transatlantic links, all this we have to rationally, and I will just end by this comment, which is a bit contradictory to what I rationally address. Thank you very much. I often think, you know, the other great phrase is, Le Rope qui protège. But I always think, protège from what exactly? I mean, who I understand, but what's from what is confusing?