I was making a little list of some of the issues.
With the economic situation we're in right now, people are not buying cars, they're not buying shoes, they're not buying furniture, they're not buying things made with leather. That, right there, has reduced the price of cattle by about $30 to $35 a head on the price of the hide.
Also, on not having access to markets, we're not selling. Every animal has a liver and a set of lungs, and those aren't going to the markets that value them most. That is costing about $80 to $100 a head.
On the costs of the enhanced feed ban, which is not harmonized with the United States, depending on what type of cattle and on what part of the country you're in, the cost is anywhere from $10 to $50 a head.
Country-of-origin labelling is costing us about $90 a head, and then there are other regulatory issues.
So easily, just with those items, we're at somewhere between $250 and $300 a head. Compare that to a per-head payment, which is sort of a one-time shot of $40 or $100 a head. It doesn't compare to getting your regulatory costs in order, getting your markets back, and getting your regulations harmonized, and to the economy returning to where people are buying leather and all those sorts of things.
We're much better off getting an additional $200 to $300 per head than we are getting a government payment of a fraction of that.