I think you're looking for a very generalized answer to that. And I know that Hollywood right now.... I was watching a television show last night with my parents. They were looking for a criminal and the person said a business person and a psychopath were really the same thing, so they started looking at a list of business people and found the criminal. I doubt even Mr. Marston would go that far.
But I think the overdramatization in our entertainment system has painted a picture that's very far from correct. We talk about the amount of money a bank will make in a given year. They don't talk about how much that is over the amount of capital they have invested. They talk in terms of gross dollars.
I'm going to go off a little bit, James, if you don't mind, and take the opportunity to answer your question, based on a lot of the comment here when we talk about corporate tax cuts and have some questions about vision. A number of years ago, when my good friend Jim Dinning was the provincial treasurer of Alberta, he noted that we spent more money in Alberta on economic development than we brought in on corporate taxes. He suggested eliminating corporate taxes and eliminating spending money on economic development. We would be further ahead and probably wouldn't have to advertise Alberta as a place to go. And that's maybe something for the folks in Saskatchewan to think about. If we did that in Alberta and eliminated corporate taxes, would that have an impact on the jobs in Saskatchewan and the reverse effect in Alberta? I would imagine it would.
So if you don't think those things impact jobs and wealth and poverty, imagine what would happen if Alberta decided they weren't going to have corporate taxes any more. Or imagine what would happen if Canada did that.
That's just a little fantasy. I don't want to give you any indigestion, Wayne, but....