It's amazing. It's a fairly smelly job, but you'd really be interested in what you find. I mean, we even found a chopped up bicycle in a garbage bag. There's a huge amount of stuff that isn't recycled properly. The technology is there. Rip open the bag, sort out the metal, sort out the batteries, discover anything that can be recycled. Again it comes down to the cost of that. As the technology develops, the cost gets lower and lower, but you have to develop that technology. As I said, I believe it's out there. I think that has already been invented. But you still have stuff that you have to deal with.
Composting is one thing for some of it, but now you get into what about the air, what about the soil, so it seems to me that keeping that garbage out of the ground is the only way you're going to deal with it. I believe it can be done economically and I think there's money to be made from garbage. Countries are proving that. The companies are proving that. But you have to get the plants built.
We've done a lot of talk. I can't even count how many public hearings I've been at about garbage, from the 1970s and on. There's a lot of talk, but not many people are taking much action. We take another piece of land and have all the hearings, then it goes ahead and we bury it.