To further that, I want to ask you a little bit about this. If we think about the history of donations and why governments have gotten into the habit of affording people tax deductions when they give, governments recognize that there are areas in society—I'm not telling you anything new, but just for the sake of those who might be listening—that they can't tend to, or they may fail to tend to. Subsequently, charitable organizations crop up that see these needs and then serve those areas.
I guess this is a broader question to everybody as well. Again, if we move away from....
You made a very interesting point—maybe we will have time to go back to that—about the fact that Australia doesn't offer tax deductions to religious organizations.
Again, if we start to organize, won't we be in essence picking winners and losers on social subjects or social areas that traditionally those organizations have served?