I'll have to fess up and confess that I have not studied the history of it. I wouldn't be able to comment intelligently on the history of that case, but I think the unfair competition points that we make.... I referred earlier to the ability of credit unions to offer postal services in certain communities. When we had that legislation built, there was a rigorous process to go through to get the approval. You're not creating that space in a competitive environment where it is going to cause friction; it would be more in those communities where it would be a combination of services to meet the members' needs. We wouldn't see postal services in large urban areas necessarily being combined.
The competitive rubs with some of the other crown financial sectors have been things such as access to capital for lending. We need to attract deposits to have the liquidity to lend. What would be the source of lending for postal banking?
The other things would be access to capital to create the safety of the financial institution. We need to be profitable enough to build reserves, since reserves are needed for the safety of depositors.
It's those types of things, the full financial services, that would be at issue with us.