Thank you, Chair.
Thank you all for coming here.
I'm one of the newbies. I think there are a lot of newbies here, and we're just gathering information and trying to understand.
In a former life—and we still own it—we owned a car dealership. They used to call the dealer principals—I guess I was a dealer principal—three-fingered Charlies because we would zoom into the assets, the liabilities, and the profit/loss. Those were the only three figures that we were really interested in.
I'm somewhat surprised, and maybe I'm missing this, but.... If I could just segue for a second—maybe I can answer Mr. Martin's question, too—advertising is a form of promotion. I think that's probably why the government does it. If my memory serves me correctly, we'd advertise about 6% of gross sales, so if gross sales were $10 million, it's sizeable. To that degree, if you look at what the federal government is spending, it's far, far less than that. If it is a form of promotion for oils and sands, or 20% of GDP, then it makes sense that we would spend that kind of money on the oil and sands—pardon me, the oil and gas industry.
Do you have or does the federal government have a spreadsheet much the same that would list assets and liabilities? Obviously, we take in a sizeable amount of money, we spend a lot of money, but do we have a figure? What's the federal government worth?