I think there's a large spectrum. If you talk about everything from the traditional hunting, fishing, and outfitting types of jobs through to very specialized grains and veneers types of things or to tissue, the good news is that the forest is very dynamic and we can adapt, as you pointed out, to do different things.
I think you need creativity and you need energy, as with anything else in life. The problem is that Canada had a big role at one time but we didn't really advance very far in the sophistication of value-added products. We were seen as quite complacent, and we stayed for 100 years making newsprint and lumber and craft pulp and didn't really get into the value-added chain very much.
The world has changed. Brazil is the dominant player in the pulp business today. It elbowed us out of the way. The Internet elbowed us out of the way in the newsprint business. Okay, now what else can we do? So we make tissue or we'll make the guitar tops or we can find other opportunities. But we have to have a fire in our belly to want to run in the race, because it's too easy to quit, and the money moves offshore and then we're left with communities that are decimated.
We can do it, but that's why we're back at the tax treatment, you know.