Well, I just quickly wrote down three, so I'm going to stick with three.
First of all, there is money. We have to be able to make a living. That's simple. Everybody has to be able to make a living. We need to be paid appropriately for what we're doing, and all farmers need to do that. Until all farmers are making enough money, young farmers are not going to be interested in getting into this. They're going to be moving to Ottawa and getting jobs with you guys.
The second thing is--and this is where it starts getting a little bit vague--we need to reinstill the pride in farming. Farmers have been marginalized so terribly in the last 30 years. When I was growing up, nobody wanted to be a farmer. It's starting to change now a little bit, but farmers have been pushed down so far into the ground that there's no pride. Rural communities are so devastated. What I get asked every day is why I would want to live in a small town in Saskatchewan. So we need to put that back into it somehow.
This is a good occupation, and there is a lot of opportunity for young people to make a good living and to have a really great life. We need to somehow bring that pride back.
The third thing I wrote down quickly was community, and that goes in with the pride thing. Young people need to feel as though they have a community they can be a part of and contribute to in a rural area as they're farming. When I say this, I'm thinking specifically of Saskatchewan. That's really my only reference point. There are so many areas in Saskatchewan where there are no neighbours. You don't have neighbours. You live on a farm, and your nearest neighbour is 10 miles away. I know that's probably hard for you guys to relate to, but that's the reality of the situation. Nobody wants to live like that. People aren't going to live like that, so we need to turn that around as well.
Those are, quickly, my three points.