I think everybody would welcome the comments that Ken had to make about the spirit of cooperation. There have been some unfortunate things said in the press, and some fairly hard positions taken, so I'm happy to see that.
In terms of research into Canada without the Wheat Board, as I said before, my background is the grain trade. As somebody mentioned earlier, wheat prices are set primarily in Chicago. There is a capable industry of handlers and merchants. We certainly have the infrastructure to do what needs to be done. But once again, there are things you want to look at very carefully.
Barley and wheat are very different things, as is durum. With barley, when you look at 80% of the crop being marketed outside the board and at its relationship with the Alberta feeding industry, barley might be a natural one to see removed from the monopoly mandate. For wheat, again, its prices are set internationally. There may be some relationships with customers there that you want to look at carefully. And durum is a different commodity again. It has some special circumstances that you'd want to think about carefully as you move forward into a marketing choice environment. I'm not suggesting that you just pull a curtain and that's the end of it.