You were talking about whether there is any hope with weather-related issues and whatnot. What I would say is that we're seeing record returns in the marketplace. There's lots of value being produced in the marketplace. It's not about weather, but about being able to extract enough of an income from the marketplace that you can weather a bad year. If you have a drought one year but had been making a fair share from the marketplace, you would be able to weather the storm, if you will. The problem is that there's a hypersensitivity in the industry among farmers. They're excellent business people. One of the things that gets bandied about is that some farmers can't actually do it, but the amazing thing is that they've been able to do it on such thin margins.
In fact, the one caution I would have about prices is this. While I think it's fantastic when prices increase, it's really about the margins. One thing we've seen over and over again is that no matter where prices go, input prices follow. That is essentially what captures your ability as a farmer to extract a living from the marketplace. So when you have something like a trade dispute or a weather-related issue, you're not able to get through that crisis because your income is actually hypersensitive. That throws us back to talking about these programs to bail us out of these problems created by a power imbalance in the marketplace.