I understand traceability. I have the biggest feedlots in the country in my riding. We're talking 50,000 to 60,000 head. I understand traceability, and the industry understands traceability, from the cow-calf operator to the packing plant. We understand why that's important and why it's needed, but to put this back on volunteers....
I hope you'll listen to and consult with the small communities. We have rodeos where there are no communities. There are a few volunteers in those areas. We have Pollockville. There's nobody there—other than the huge arena—and volunteers come out and thousands of people show up for the world's biggest bronc-riding competition. But they're volunteers, so when you're talking about technology.... With what I've seen in the regulations at this point, I would understand why they're done. They can't do it with volunteers.
Traceability in the industry I understand, but in community fairs...? When you're talking about the chickens, the roosters, the geese, the donkeys and the reindeer that show up in my winter one, I think that's.... I hope you get that back from them, because this is just not viable. It's not viable. I understand traceability in the industry, trust me—