Just very quickly, from the supply management side, it's interesting that right now, just because of our trade agreements, we have to buy 20% of our day-old chicks from the U.S. Putting that into perspective, what you've done is taken the hatcheries here in Ontario—or any province in Canada—and you've suddenly said that 20% of your market is off the table, without question. If you put that back in every person's life, you've effectively said, you're not working a five-day work week any more, you're working four, or instead of making $20 an hour, you're down to $15, or you're down to $10, because of trade agreements.
On the chicken side, we're already allowing in for import 8.5%, and we go to the WTO and everybody is saying you have to increase that. Nobody's even close to that. That's the shame in it all. If the U.S. and the European Union allowed 8.5% free trade, everybody's problems would be solved who think that free trade is the way to prosperity, but there are all these artificial barriers that suddenly pop up.
You can find whatever you'd like, but I think we have to look at what we're giving up and what we're getting. You can be the boy scout all you want, but the fact is, if you come in with another piece of legislation or suddenly you just say we have a homegrown effort, if you have Grow Ontario or Grow Canada, but you really stick to it, your trade agreements won't mean anything. I think we have to be very careful with what we're doing there.