I think we are learning, and we're learning very quickly. A good example is on potatoes, what we just had with the potatoes, this nematode, something that hit our producers in Idaho last spring and then in Quebec in August. Within six weeks, or something like that, after this happened we had a protocol that lays down that if something happens in the future, here's what each of us is going to do.
For avian influenza, we now have a protocol that lays out, okay, if this happens, we're not getting into banning the whole country; we're going to look at it this way.
So we are developing those types of protocols. We don't have it for everything--we don't know what the next big problem is--but the timeframe we are getting to deal with it and to realize what we should do is narrowing a lot.
Yes, we learned something from the FDA bioterrorism experience that you talked about. We all were wondering what the heck was going to go on with that. There were little bumps, but, by and large, Canada presented itself so convincingly to U.S. officials, in terms of having mechanisms set up, so that this would not create this gigantic problem at the border.
I think we are making significant progress. When you consider two governments that have such a wide diversity of interests, I think we are.