They're basically ordinary people. In Windsor, of course, we're right next to Detroit, so you have a large workforce of maybe 6,000 people who run across the border every day. They're clerks, they work in lawyers' offices, they work at some of the big department stores—things like that. Sure, there are engineers and nurses and so on, but these are just ordinary people. They're really not people looking for social security when they retire. I mean, they are people who are looking for social security; they're not the kind of people who can do without social security. They're just ordinary people, just as I'm an ordinary person. They expect that when you retire, you'd never have the rules changed on you after you retire. In the United States, apparently, there was something Ronald Reagan had done where he gave 30 years' notice as to different changes that were going to be made to U.S. social security.
They're ordinary people, just like you and me and most people around here; they're just trying to get along in life and make things work for their families.