everything other than dominique strauss-kahn, since we did that for the last segment, with bernard-henri levy from france, simon schama, bret stephens and chrystia freeland. berna bernard, let me ask you -- you're in france right now. what is the mood in europe with regard to greece? is there a sense this is one more week of crisis and they will somehow muddle along, or is there a more fundamental fear to put it bluntly, that the european project is falling apart? >> i think that is the risk and that is the concern, of course. we had the feeling, us europeans, that we could sleep, and during our sleep europe was flourishing and blooming. we're discovering that this is not the case, that europe might not be in the sense of history, that europe might destroy itself as much as build itself. we are discovering that it is a frail and fragile project. it does not mean it's in the process of being broken, but it means that if we don't act quickly and strongly probably we will go back 50 years backward. it would be very bad for the free world, including, of course, america. >> chrystia, you understan