Mr. Robson, I'm not asking about high tax rates. It's so funny. I've had economists come to this committee with all sorts of numbers about what's going to happen to the Canadian economy in terms of investment and lost jobs over the rise in the capital gains inclusion rate that just happened weeks ago. The best data available to economists, you would think, would be when we last did it, in 1988, in the real world, yet nobody seems to have studied that. I don't understand that. It strikes me as wilful blindness, where someone's not paying attention to what happened the last time because the data does not support the position being advocated today.
My last question is going to be for Ms. Mearns.
Ms. Mearns, thank you for bringing the voice of the north here.
Decisions made about the economy in the south often have grave impacts. I'm wondering what you can tell us about the impact in terms of the climate crisis on the environment. What are you seeing in Nunavut in terms of the changes to the environment up there as a result of activities in the south?