 My question is about supporting the resistance in Iraq. I've read a lot about the resistance, and I've read a lot of opinions in the left that run the range of this debate around supporting the resistance. And I have to say that I'm still kind of confused about it. My instincts say to just support the resistance, as it is, with no judgment, because our judgment makes not that much of a difference in terms of scrutinizing what it is. So in fact, if you're, I don't need to talk about that anymore. If you know what I'm talking about in terms of how do we support fundamentalist religious groups that would have nothing really to do in North America in a North American context, yet it seems to be the only game in town in Iraq, as far as viable resistance. So there's this ongoing debate in the left that says we can't support religious fanatics, and that we need to support. We need to sort of tease out the labor movement in Iraq and other sort of smaller players within there and support them. But I find that to be wholly ineffective. So I'd like to hear what you have to say about how we support the resistance, the resistance in Iraq, and if you can weigh in on that debate, by the way. Just checking, can everybody hear, OK? I have really no idea of suggestions on how to support the Iraqi resistance in a physical way. I certainly wouldn't recommend trying to send money or something like that to be one way to get the Guantanamo. And we already know how immune Canadian citizens are for that. So I think just briefly to talk about the Iraqi resistance is that it sounds like we probably agree in that it's no one's position outside of Iraq, least of all people in the United States and other Western countries, to judge and determine what a resistance should look like. This invasion and occupation took place because we, as Americans, failed in our duty as citizens in a theoretical democracy to stop a government from launching an illegal and moral invasion and occupation. So therefore, by default, I have no place in judging, well, OK, Kalashnikovs are OK, but carbons are out. I have no moral justification that it would allow me to judge them for what kind of resistance they're going to use against the most powerful military on the planet. But a little bit about the resistance is it's extremely complex. There isn't a resistance. There's a myriad of collection of militias, of mercenaries, of nationalists, of ex-militaries. I mean, there's one person responsible for at least founding the resistance, and it's Paul Brimmer, the head of the Coalition for Visible Authority, who overnight disbanded the Iraqi military. So literally, in 24 hours, you had hundreds of thousands of armed, trained, angry, unemployed men on the streets. And that, to this day, forms the backbone, and arguably the skeleton of the resistance. But over time, it is becoming increasingly religious and Islamist, as is the rest of the country. Because when you erase the state, and not only do you not replace it, but it is replaced with violence, death, suffering, the erasing of the culture, the erasing of the shredding of the social fabric, and no infrastructure services at all, then people turn to whatever structures left, the tribe and the mosque. And the resistance is, of course, being affected by that as well. But again, according to the US military, the maximum number of people launching attacks on them that are not Iraqis is between 4% and 6%. That's according to the US military. So it's a primarily Iraqi and nationalist resistance, but it is becoming more fundamentalist and more, that the boundaries that used to exist are definitely being blurred. But Iraq's basically being broken down into different geographic areas governed by warlords, kind of like what's happened in Afghanistan, where the US is basically saying, all right, the Shia, like the Fadila party, you guys got this part of Basra, the Saudis have this part, the Bada organization, the militia of SIC, you've got this part. So it's basically being divvied up to warlords and their militias and tribes and their militias. And that's becoming really, really common too.