Richard Gere: No, because it's a deep support, it's not momentary. I've been living with this for three decades now and it doesn't matter in the US, it doesn't matter if it's Republicans or Democrats who control. It's unanimous, the resolutions about Tibet. We have stood up with resolutions on the table that Tibet is, that the sense of the Congress is that Tibet is an occupied country. There are still statutes in the UN that it's an occupied country. But it's irrelevant, look at the world that we live in today and you have to think in terms of the long run, especially if you are committed to non-violence. Non-violence does not happen quickly. It happens over decades and for the Tibetans it's been 60 years now, so it may be 70 or 80 years or maybe a hundred years. But it won't go away unless the Chinese kill every single Tibetan and I don't think that they are capable of that.