 Yes, we've worked out how many hands they have. Do you see them? They're already at their waist. Do you never see that? They've got their shoes on. They're on the basis of how many hands they have. I guess that's how I feel. I think they're so happy. Robert Johnson, we're a man of peace than you are. I'm the other man. I'm the only one. Please, please, please. I don't understand what you're saying. Is there another one? Is there another one? Is there another one? I don't know what they have. I'm not sure if they have the same. I don't understand this. Mr. President, some of these demonstrators think Gorbachev is more a man of peace than you are. Are you upset by the demonstration, sir? The official competition can take place. With this future vision full of hope. Full of hope and care, Mr. President, the Berliners, with their last visit and the vision of a free and unbridled Berlin and therefore of a free and unbridled Germany. The Brandenburger Gate has been closed for 26 years. And before us, the streets of the 17th of June, which no longer exist in the eastern part of the world, because this serves the people. Such a policy is self-evidently based on the realities. But it is set to improve the situation of Berliners. The CDR is important to us and it is prepared for this. It is also part of a constructive climate. We can achieve this. In and for this creative, this visible city. And it makes the deep friendship between Germans. America is of existential importance. If there is ever a proof of this, here in Berlin it is brought into the most difficult time. Today the city thrives in spite of the challenges implicit in the very presence of this wall. What keeps you here? Certainly there's a great deal to be said for your fortitude. That if they should have the kind of government that they apparently seek, no one would ever be able to do what they're doing.