I have another small question, if I might.
Mr. Knubley previously referred to the C.D. Howe Institute and to the George Morris Centre. I know the people at the George Morris Centre. It's in Guelph. They are typically conservative-leaning think-tanks. There is nothing wrong with that. You need to hear from all sources all the time, in balance.
One of the other conservative magazines, The Economist, recently said that smaller producers faced with mounting market costs will inevitably have to sell their farms to bigger rivals and agri-business companies, devastating small prairie towns whose economies depend on individual farmers with disposable income.
What causes me concern is not so much what's in the bill but what is not in the bill. As parliamentarians, we have to look five, ten, fifteen years down the road. I'm concerned about food security and food sovereignty. I'm concerned about some of these small farms being bought up by large agri-businesses and, more likely, by foreign countries whose concern will be more with their interests than with our food sovereignty.
Does that concern you—the purchasing of all of these small farms by big agri-business or other countries? Should there be some legislation to keep that from happening in order to protect our food sovereignty?