I'll tackle that one, Mark.
What I'll do is put it in some context. Everybody is familiar with the G-8 meetings that took place. Subsequently, there was also a G-8 farmers conference that I attended, which was actually expanded to the G-14. Around the table were various countries, some developing and some developed, like the U.S. Within that discussion--it was a room much like this--the main topic was the crisis and where the farmers' place was in this. They discussed that they, at some point, could be seen as a way out of this economic mess, because if you feed people, your economy does better. That was a simple equation.
Within that meeting we discussed that we need a way to manage supply, we need a way to get a fair price to our farmer, and we need a way to make sure that it maintains it long term. So basically they were discussing supply management without uttering the words. There were declarations that were sent to the governments, including ours. In fact a number of us delivered the signed declaration to Minister Ritz when we were in Italy, so he does have a copy of that. It is something that's discussed. I think we, as supply management commodities, do spend a lot of time promoting this worldwide, trying to educate. I know in the past it has been a CFA policy, within the education realm of supply management, to foster that.
It is something that's being done. It seems to be an uphill battle, but I think with the current economic crisis it's something that's maybe falling on ears that aren't as deaf as they used to be.
Secondary to that--and Richard may expand on this--I know that some of the dairy individuals in Wisconsin are looking at managing their supply within dairy.