I'm not an expert on genetics or on genetic drift, but it seems to me that one of the problems is that you create a system in which the people who want to use the biotechnology products.... The way it's couched now, the right is with those who want to grow organics. In other words, there's the idea that you are going to pollute me; however, the organic people are a smaller industry.
I don't know how to say this. I grew up in British Columbia, and we had free-range cattle in the Cariboo area of British Columbia when I grew up. There are two ways to approach free-range cattle. One is that you fence them in, and one is that you fence them out. That was the dominant production system for free-range cattle. The system they used was to fence them out. In other words, if you didn't want to be polluted by cattle coming and grazing your vegetable patch, you fenced them out.
I think that's the real discussion. We have to say that if you need to have a barrier around your land to keep genetic drift out, maybe it should fence out rather than force people to fence in. That would be my answer. At least, that's the real discussion to have.