 Well, yes. I think there's an irony here, because in Julia's book she talks a lot about the agenda of the Pope Varsus' papacy is towards decentralization. And of course, the defining moment for me in Pope Benedict's papacy is decentralization. They're basically saying that people that want to celebrate the mass of the ages, the traditional Latin mass, clearly have a right to do so, because Catholics have done that for centuries. They can't suddenly be illegal to do something which all Catholics, including great Catholic saints, and some Catholic saints such as Edmund Campion, and the 14 English martyrs, the 85 Beatified Masters, died to stop that mass being taken away from the people of England. It can't possibly be wrong for people to want to attend the traditional Latin mass and to worship thereby. And in order to bypass the corrupt vertical structures of the church, he decentralizes and gives that right back to individual priests. And what we see characteristic most recently from the Vatican is actually taking that decentralization back and placing the power back in the hands of the hierarchy and ultimately the Pope.