No, I agree with you, we used to have seasonal tariffs and we used to have snap-back mechanisms in place. Those didn't always work effectively, either, as there were challenges in getting those implemented when needed.
Generally, going back to the points we were making, if we want to build a framework that has an element of food security and sovereignty in it, we need to find those kinds of mechanisms that protect industry under those circumstances until--and this is a big “until”--we get a process through trade agreements and things like that and we level the playing field so that we don't have to face the competition from heavily subsidized products in the U.S. and Europe and so on. That's been the goal for many years, but other governments, the U.S. and Europe particularly, find means to subsidize their producers based on domestic food security policy.
So until we can level that playing field, we need to have mechanisms that protect our industry under those circumstances.