Right. And I think that's important.
This leads to my next question. Let's look at that subset of GM products. I detect--and you can clarify it for me--that the organic sector wants a moratorium. You want, basically, a moratorium on GM products—not good, strict regulations, or a tough but fair regulatory system. And yet when we talked to the soybean growers, for example, where they actually have GM and non-GM, one of the questions I put to them was whether a tension existed between their GM farmers and their non-GM farmers where the non-GM farmers felt threatened by the presence of the GM farmers' cross-contamination issues, all the things we're talking about today. The answer was no. There's a mutual respect there, in that “I'm a non-GM soy grower. I'm going to grow my crop and I'm going to take measures to ensure it's non-GM. You're a GM grower. You take the measures you need to grow your crop.” But there's not this “I am absolutely against GM soy growers.”
But that's not what I'm detecting from the organic sector, in general. I'm detecting.... Well, you had said that you wanted to see a moratorium.