Sorry, I'm going to answer in English.
We have a very good trade remedy system. I don't want you to think of my remarks as being about a porous border where problems are taking place. I really want to stress that we have a very good trade remedy system.
That said, it is just a fact that certain types of importers trying to get their products into our country will use all sorts of tactics to avoid paying the required duties on their products. This could include things like a dutied country sending steel to another country that's not duty-bound, doing some slight transformation to it and then bringing it into our country. We have no capacity in Canada to see the visibility of that transformation and to understand that the steel is actually coming from a country that should have a tariff applied to it.
While I do feel that we have a good system, it must continue to move forward, and we are seeing the Americans do that. I appreciate the discussion around reciprocity and retaliation and all of that—as an industry, we have been there for sure—but what we'd prefer to see is that we're actually linking arms with the Americans on this challenge and turning our attention outwards against those areas of concern.