On the banning of the vertical integration, we think that has to take place. There are some steps obviously along the road that you would have to take to make sure you're protecting economic activity and you're protecting jobs and those sorts of things, but we think that's a step we need to go to.
One of the things I find absolutely fascinating as a student of history is that we, as a people, as Canadian people, came to this land to create a different kind of community, a community based on merit, to grow and to get rid of the lords of the manor and that sort of thing. Now we're getting back to that again, only now we're calling them CEOs. It just seems to me that somewhere along the line we lost touch. That might be my independent Grey--Bruce nature, that I think I can probably do a better job running the business of my farm than some CEO who tells me I have to do A, B, and C in order to sell my cattle, but I think we've taken a step in the wrong direction. One of the steps back in the right direction is to ban some of the vertical integration that's taken place, because then farmers are without options. You have to start at A to be able to get your count up to D, and all the way through there you're picking up little bits of profit being taken away.