That part comes out of my longer paper that you've obviously read. It's not in this one.
First of all, with respect to the legacy of relationships, there are these programs where you get people together. The Governor General has one and does something every year. Various groups get kids together and make them travel. Anyone who has ever been on one of those things says, “It changed my whole life and it changed my whole sense of the country”. They make friends and all of that kind of stuff. But for a year like this, it has to be an order of magnitude bigger.
In 1967, Expo actually lost less money than was budgeted for it, in terms of the costs to the taxpayer. It cost the taxpayer about $220 million in 1967 dollars to do Expo 67--not the whole centennial. If you took that amount of money in current dollars, you could have the biggest mosh pit in the history of the country—