Yes. Unfortunately, I only see this as a consumer, not as a businessman. I myself don't buy from Europeans, so I don't know what they do. I do buy from Americans, and I do see what the American rates are, since I'm also a client of the United States Postal Service. As I said, they will mark up a product coming to Canada, maybe 30% to 40% more than domestic, whereas we tend to mark it up a lot more in Canada.
They regard it as follows. Getting it to the country costs you something. Then once it's in that country, it's whatever the postal union rate is. We can either charge a lot for the service of taking it out of the country, so that we can recover costs for domestic in doing so, or we can just deliver it to the United States at cost, let's say, or close to at cost, and then pay the fee for delivery in the United States. It would probably be more competitive that way.