Mr. Van Kesteren, if you look at my opening statement, the prime blocks of spectrum are blocks 2, 3, 6, and 7. AT&T can buy two. They'll buy 2 and 3. Verizon can buy two. They'll buy 6 and 7. That might happen. We'll say, okay, good, let them go. Where are they going to go? They're going to go to Toronto, to Montreal, and to Vancouver. That's where they're going to go. Again, if they're going to come in, we're happy to compete against them. But we want to compete on an equal footing. Why would we put our national champions, Bell, Rogers, and Telus, in the pit with these folks with one hand tied behind our backs? Their market caps are $200 billion. Our market cap is $30 billion. They have ten times the revenues.
We're saying fine, if that's the government's policy decision, we can live with that. But we want an opportunity to bid for the same amount of spectrum.
Again, I have no quarrel with my friends on this panel. The fact that they have an opportunity to bid for two blocks and we have an opportunity for one, peace on that.