I'm recommending something that's been implemented in other countries. In at least one I know of, Iceland, which has no income tax—God forbid! That just shatters most government thinkers. They don't tax income and they don't tax work. But they do tax consumption. So at the point of sale, the cost of that SUV in the manufacturing of it, which includes all the resources that went into it, plus its running costs, meaning it's going to use more of the world's natural resources running, because it uses more energy, it uses more air—You know, cars don't combust without the use of the airshed. Then they use the airshed as a sewage system because it's not a closed-loop system. At the point of sale, you pay for that. And at the point of sale of your then subsequent purchases of gasoline to run that SUV, you pay, but you don't pay income tax. So for people who are trying to do—
This isn't a moral argument. If I want to run an SUV and I can afford to do it and I pay for it fully, I should be allowed to have one. If I'm not paying for it fully and I'm being subsidized by other Canadians who are driving their Smart cars and doing all the rest of it, but they save money and then get taxed on the savings, being efficient in their use of resources for themselves and others, I consider that a perverse system. It will not change the fundamental behaviour of consumers. In the consumer's mind, it doesn't link the impact they're having on their own environment that they live and breathe. And it doesn't allow business to make good decisions either.
This isn't about foisting the cost on the manufacturers; this is about all of us who want to use the resources of the world to use them. That's all it is.
It's very hard to overhaul our systems, but I'm really pleading with the government to think in a much more—[Technical difficulty--Editor]