It's very nice when it's written like this, but just to say what Mr. Lunney pinpointed before, it's pratico pratique. If you start at the beginning, it's not gracious. Most of the time the discussion for motions is not gracious at all.
The problem we have to face is quite easy. You're going to get a dozen motions, and until the first one is finished, you're never going to go to the second one, or the third one. That happened before. At that time, we just lose more time. You could come out, or Paul could come out, or any one of us could come out with a motion, and because the first one has not been dealt with totally, things are just postponed and postponed, and we achieve nothing.
I'll leave it like it is right now. The standing committee is going to meet, and we could come up with having 30 minutes or one hour just on motions, I think, because with a group it's just impossible to achieve anything in 15 minutes. That's the way I feel. I think we should leave it as it is for the moment. We can live with this, but it needs to be done at the end. The most important thing is that when we have witnesses, if it's 9 to 11, then in the last hour there should not be more than two witnesses, because at that time, you see, we're just completely finished.