Very quickly, I think we have done what you've said and we've done all we can. In other words, we have not opposed the seal hunt. The fact that the world's leading conservation organization doesn't oppose it on conservation grounds says something about our science. We do look at the seal hunt, believe me. The day it became a conservation issue we would have to have a comment on it from a conservation point of view. Right now, it's not one, and it's distracting a heck of a lot of attention I think from some of the more important issues--resources and everything else. You have no idea how many millions of letters we've received internationally on this.
You recognize we're in a hundred different countries and there are a lot of cultural differences in our organization among the different countries, and it has caused problems. We've looked at it very deeply in our organization because of some of these differences. We are unified as a global organization, not just WWF-Canada, on our position. I think that's the strength we can bring to it.
We're not about to enter into a campaign against other organizations. We have plenty enough to do towards conservation issues and to hold our course, and I think our position says all it needs to say about our views on other claims on the credibility of the science.