Creating legislation to save small farmers is a whole new subject. Are we concerned about the family farm? Yes. Are we concerned about small to medium-sized farms having less power in the marketplace? Yes, but that's exactly why we are doing what we're doing. That's why FNA was started back in 1998, for the input side. Now we’ve started doing the same thing for the market side, and we want to continue to help empower farmers there, because we think 10,000 farmers working together can do an awful lot of good.
That's also why I suggested making sure that the new board of the Wheat Board, whoever that may be, has the impetus and the incentive to try to make that a successful marketing agency so that in the five-year transition period there is something viable farmers can use, if they so choose, so that at the end of those five years there is something farmers can embrace and can say it is theirs, it is working, and it is what they want to use, for those farmers who want to use it.