I think it's important, and there are some very delicate aspects to it. There are people who came here to escape from dangers to their lives and regarded money in Switzerland as being a source of security in case they had to escape again. It was something that was almost hard-wired into their brains.
The other thing that's critically important about it is that the children of immigrants are more prone to move. They'll move to the United States. People from the United States don't move to Canada; people from Canada move to the United States and to other places. That deals in a very critical manner with our ability to enforce.
There are no international norms for collection of tax. The kids of immigrants who come to Canada will go to school in the United States. One of my kids was in Columbus. One of my kids was in Cleveland. They did come back. They were doctors, by the way, and they happened to like the Canadian system.
But the fact that the demographics include a large number of immigrants is very important, and a lot of it comes from the immigrant mentality that they might have to run again. It's something that does not resonate well with functionaries, but it happens to be a fact.
Where I think Scott and I live, we're in the trenches; we smell the burning flesh. We understand the family dynamics; we're dealing with the stories. These people say they don't know when they'll have to go; that's their security.