Well, I think the money issue, since you put it that way, is more important for our consumers buying abroad. For sellers, I always put it on my truck and drive it to the U.S. I've been doing so for 15 years. I keep doing it; it's not a problem. As for Europe, we'll set up depots in Europe. We're already planning to send stuff to Amazon FBA, Fulfillment by Amazon. They're all over the place, Europe, the U.S., wherever. We'll build the products in our plant here and we'll ship them there, and then fulfill from there. Whether we lose this nice access to these markets is really quite irrelevant because we're going to set up to avoid that. The Canadian, when he buys, is going to prefer dealing with the foreigner who is getting this cheap entry, especially to remote regions, more than us.
Also, it's a bit of a pity for the poor person who lives in Nunavut or something, where it's very difficult to do e-commerce when they're going to have to ship everything across the U.S. border. It's not going to happen.
E-commerce is a good thing. I can see many Inuit probably wanting to sell their art on websites, and lots of people around the world wanting to buy it.