Right, and I want to address that. It's a concern I have, and it's a concern I know Mr. Brison—who's here with us today—expressed in the context of the regulatory constraints faced by business, that regulations are disproportionately difficult for small business to comply with, but easier for large businesses, and he wanted to try to level the playing field. I know it's a concern that many of us who have dealt with the regulatory structures in this country have, and I see a parallel here.
So knowing that a number of small and medium businesses, and individuals, have tried to utilize these cooperative tax haven schemes being marketed, I was somewhat disheartened the other day when the Canada Revenue Agency came and testified they were working hard to shut those down and were addressing them as a real problem. But if that's a real problem for those small guys, and Canada Revenue Agency is focusing on addressing them, I think my concern is that they're doing that at the agency because they're checkers players and they are going after other checkers players when the chess player is escaping the attentiveness that needs to be focused on them.
Do you share a concern about the disproportionate obligation we're placing on small and medium enterprises versus large enterprises in the context of corporate taxation?