Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
In terms of our having to do the bilateral, no question; we can't wait for the WTO, no question. We have a host of products that we can sell to other parts of the world.
There's one other thing I wanted to mention—I had it written down here, but I didn't read it because of the time—about the Department of Agriculture itself. I happened to be there in the department at lunch hour one day, and you can see it's just like a beehive down in the cafeteria. But when you look over the crowd, you see it's all young people who have never been exposed to agriculture, who most likely have no background in agriculture and probably no education in agriculture. They are just there to push pens.
That perhaps sounds negative, but that's not how I mean it. The thing is that we have to expose these people to agriculture and we have to educate them in agriculture. That is when we get maybe a broader feeling in the department for what is needed in the country. I've seen that from my own background. We were exposed to an awful lot of history with regard to World War II. That was tremendous. My grandmothers, my mother, and my sisters still have cellars full because of that exposure. Here you only have the fridge full for one day. And that is the big difference.