I'll bring it back to the comment earlier from Mr. Waugh about employment levels in Saskatoon at Global Saskatoon or CTV Saskatoon. I will be the first to acknowledge, because Mr. Waugh and I actually worked across the street from each other in Saskatoon many years ago, that employment levels have declined in almost all Canadian local television stations. If you pick the Saskatoon example, there was a time when CTV and Global in Saskatoon had most of the market to themselves. They would have been able to make profits on their entertainment programming through prime time, which would have been used to cross-subsidize the losses they had to take in local news. To be really clear, every single medium- to small-market television station in this country loses money in local news.
Nowadays, the largest television network in Saskatoon in prime time is Netflix. We may only have 36 employees in Saskatoon, but Netflix has zero, Apple has zero and Google has zero. That is the question we need to be asking, not trying to continue to hold Canadian companies and broadcasters to one standard while applying none of the same standards, none of the same regulations and none of the same obligations to foreign competitors.