Right. So that's a tremendous accomplishment for the system. The second part of all this is that when this policy was worked out, cable was given a monopoly. That monopoly is gone. In Winnipeg you have a choice of five distribution television services. We have to compete, and we have to set our rates accordingly and put our packages together accordingly. These are tremendous accomplishments of the Canadian broadcasting system and we should be very proud of them.
Now people are saying there's a systemic issue and we need a short-term solution. Well, that's a contradiction. If there's a systemic problem it requires a longer-term look. It needs a good review of what the facts are. What it doesn't need is, “Oh, okay, let's panic; let's have fee-for-carriage and let's have it because the Americans have it.” Look, we ran systems in the United States. There is one single objective in the U.S. broadcasting system: profit. There are no content regulations. There are no cultural obligations. There's nothing. You produce and that's the objective. That kind of system isn't going to work in Canada. We're proud of the fact that we offer services in all of the smaller communities we serve, and that's what we will continue to do, and that's why we're proud of the Canadian broadcasting system.