The second line of that song was “What it is ain't exactly clear”. Obviously there is a worldwide movement going on here, and we're listening very carefully, very closely. There are people with concern. Obviously there's a lot of uncertainty about the economic future, and we have to be sensitive to that.
But having said that, I mentioned that this is worldwide, and if you look at the protests on Wall Street and in Europe and elsewhere, the things that are the targets did not happen here. There were no bank bailouts; there were no failures; there was no taxpayers' money on the dime being spent on Canadian banks. Banks continued to lend during the crisis. They did what they were supposed to do. Other lenders, non-bank lenders, pulled out of the economy, folded up shop, and went home.
Canadian banks took up the slack to the best extent they were able to. That is critically important. If there is one lesson we have learned from the crisis, it is the importance of having banks that remain strong and can contribute in communities across the country, and they have done that.
So in the sense that there is this maybe unfocused concern out there, I think within this country--and not only looking just at the banks and the role they play in supporting job growth--we have an economy that still is on the plus side of GDP. Jobs are bring created. There is uncertainty, but there is no country in this world that I would rather be in than Canada.