But in some respects, that's like talking to yourself. If he decides that the financial system is destabilized, then he puts whatever he needs up on the list and he publishes it. It's hardly a check and a balance. It's hardly something where the public of Canada, in right of the minister, for instance, or in right of Parliament, really has any say on what the governor decides goes on the list. It's an appearance of a check, but it just doesn't strike me as one.