My point, I guess, is the fact that we're considering right now, and we hear the government musing about, asset recycling, which is basically privatizing public assets so that we'll raise the capital to actually fund the privatization of other public assets. We've never had this debate in this country. I don't recall the word “privatization” being said during the electoral campaign. Right now this is the direction we're going in too.
I would beg to differ with you that private equity would actually not be interested. Maybe they wouldn't be interested in those 30-year projects, but there are projects that won't take 30 years, which they might actually want to fund over five or 10 or 15 years. We're opening the door to this. At some point I'd like to understand how we can actually go in that direction right now, how we could be pushed in this direction as early as November 1 for the fiscal and economic update or November 14 when there will be that major investment meeting in Toronto, and not have the debate in the House by calling it what it is, which is privatization. Canadians have never been told that we're ready to actually provide either our pension funds or private equity asset management with those assets.
The way they will get the return is basically by tolls, basically by fees, and by other ways of getting back their investment. Where's that debate right now? I understand that you have been hired. I'm putting that on you right now, but you are basically the agent of government. At some point we'll need to have the debate in the House.