 When they had the American election, I wondered if the Republicans moved to the religious right. In fact, actually put people off, you know. So the Republicans have moved to the woods of religious right to what extent they put people off. I think it did. I think there's no question that the Republicans have become a party that owes its success, to the religious right, and therefore has alienated much of the population. The evangelicals, unfortunately, dominate the internal process within the Republican Party where candidates are chosen. So even though those candidates are often not appealing to the general population, they get the nomination from the Republican Party because they appeal to the internal mechanism. My personal view is that the religious right is the greatest threat to liberty in the United States today, much more so than Obama in the left. Partially because the religious right is fundamentally leftist, not rightist when it comes to economic policy. I think you saw that, I don't know how many of you follow American politics, but you saw that with the candidacy of Mike Huckabee, who was the candidate of the religious right, very much a populist when it comes to economics, anti-free trade, anti-immigration, anti-Wall Street, and very much wanting to move the party leftward when it comes to economics, and at the same time wanting to control our lives when it came to personal choices, and actually at some point said that he wanted to rewrite the American Constitution so that religious play a bigger role in it than it does today. And then actually Palin, who was McCain's choice for vice president, played the same kind of role, tried to get evangelicals by appealing to religion, but her economics were very populist. You know, McCain and Palin started every speech attacking the old companies and drug companies, big oil and big drugs, so the people who provide the lifeline of Western civilization who run everything that runs on, and the people who make us better when we get sick and have the potential to prolong human life, who knows by how many decades if they're left free. Those are the enemies that the Republicans need to be against. I think that wing of the Republican Party is very dangerous. I think it's growing in influence. I think that the Republicans, if anything, are moving more towards the religious right than going to move more towards the religious right after the defeat in this election. There's a battle going on within the Republican Party right now between kind of the free market people and the religious conservatives. The religious conservatives clearly have the upper hand. It's going to be a real struggle over the next eight years of an Obama administration to see who wins that struggle. But if the religious right wins, then, you know, I'm not sure where hope for America lies, because certainly it doesn't lie with Democrats, but there'll be nothing left of the Republicans.