As you know, I'm a director of the Canadian Coalition for Good Governance, which comprises about $1 trillion of Canadian institutional money. I haven't talked, of course, to all the members, but there isn't anybody on our board who wouldn't want to see one coordinator for all these kinds of things. But it would take a lot more than that. We would have to give to that coordinator both criminal and civil responsibilities, which are currently divided between the provincial and the federal.... We would also have to have judges who understand this kind of legislation, because the average judge isn't going to say he is smarter than a board of directors. Also, the process of being eight or ten years in court at millions of dollars doesn't give any small or medium-sized investor protection. The Castor Holdings case, I think, is now 12 years in the court and costs $20 million on each side every year. So that's no solution.
We also have to get an RCMP or a police force that understands white-collar crime, which is also not the case today.
So there's a real problem there. But the passport system, whereby the things that are decided by two people in the Yukon are going to be binding on all of Canada, I just can't see as a solution.