I have a couple of quick points.
It's the second time, Mr. Chairman, that I've been challenged on my comments around bilaterals, and I'll repeat it. I think bilaterals are good, but I do believe that if we don't look after the industry here at home, we'll have nothing to sell once those bilaterals are accomplished. Minister Ritz is, if anything, an advocate for the agricultural export industry.
Leveling the playing field is a big issue. If we have an industry here.... We get into things and we ask at what point do we stop subsidizing an industry and let it go into decline. We need to be there.
I'll use my own example. I have a cost of production that rivals that in Brazil, because of the way we've chosen to structure ourselves, yet Brazilian product will come into this country and displace the product that I produce because it's coming here at an incredibly low rate, the same as American product, which is dumped into this country.
I'm prepared to go head to head with anybody in the world on cost of production as a viable producer. I'm not prepared to sit back and go out of business because the Government of Canada—and it doesn't matter, sir, whether it's a government of today or a government of tomorrow—is not willing to protect its industries here at home.
I'll finish up on the other comment you made, sir. Under the—