If you look at the U.S. Farm Bill, that is a national policy around food and around agriculture and around rural communities, for good or ill. There are lots of problems with the U.S. Farm Bill, but it's actually a policy. We don't have a policy around these issues in Canada, and I think that's where we see some of these debates over the Wheat Board, for example.
I did one of those things that's unheard of. The first time I was in Saskatoon--being an Ontario boy, I knew very little about it--I rented a car when all my meetings were over and I just started driving around Saskatoon, saying I was this kid from Ontario wanting to know about the Wheat Board. I found that by and large--now I was in southern Saskatchewan--the farmers supported it because they understood that in the lean years they could work together. Now, there are always going to be those who want to crack heads for management, and those people have been around for a long time.
So I think, as we move forward as a country, we need to be working more together, more collectively, and those are the kinds of solutions we're going to have. We can't win the race to the bottom. We can't possibly win it when we look at our labour standards and our environmental standards. I don't want the kinds of standards for my family I see in many of our so-called competition nations, and I doubt anybody here does. So we need to start winning the race to the top, and that's where we need to be focusing.