I'm a little hesitant to pick out any one province.
At a philosophical level everyone says they get it and everyone says they agree, but when it comes down to the practical issues of how you start to implement that, or for example, start to take away subsidies to local businesses, or make sure that everybody is paying the same amount of tax, or has the same amount of the customer, that's where it tends to break down.
Again, part of this is helping provinces appreciate that they are winners when they can produce and can help establish companies that can compete everywhere in Canada and everywhere in the world, not just in their own province because they have some kind of a subsidy or some kind of a benefit. It gets expressed in a number of different ways. Even in provinces where we have significant distilling operations and where we source a tremendous amount of our grain....
The spirits industry is the largest purchaser of rye grain in Canada. We are the fourth-largest purchaser of corn in Ontario. We're substantial purchasers of grain in Quebec and in Manitoba. Even in those provinces they look at some small producers and companies now called craft distillers and want to do things that give advantages to those businesses in the marketplace. We're in this whole notion of picking winners and losers, which is not the kind of business that we think government should be into, federal, provincial, or anybody.