Okay, that's fine.
Now I'll go to Mr. Bettle. You talked about succession and transitional, intergenerational transfer of farm land. Has anyone in the farm community looked at the model, which hasn't been used that I'm aware of in the farm community but has been used in business transactions, whereby a business owner...? I want to transfer my business to you, Mr. Bettle, and the business is worth $1 million. I'm 55 years old and I decide, for capital gains.... Let's call it a farming operation, because the capital gains would apply perhaps in a more appropriate way. But $750,000 would be capital gains-exempt. I transfer that farm to you over 20 years. You pay me $50,000 a year for 20 years and you own the farm. I pay the taxes based on that, so I have a lesser tax bracket to pay on. You basically don't have to worry about Farm Credit or other lending agencies, but at the end of 20 years, providing you do a good job, you own the farm.
Is that a model—I know it's being used in corporations such as State Farm and corporations like it—that we haven't looked at and perhaps should? Or do you have a different model that you might want to propose?