I'd start, humbly, by saying I am not a doctor nor am I a scientist. I have a Bachelor of Commerce honours degree, and if we want to talk about dissecting a balance sheet, I'd be your guy.
I think what we're attempting to do is follow the science. We're talking to some of the leading—if not the leading—scientists in Canada. We're talking to and spending time with the leading scientists in the world. We're working hard. I say this without hesitation. I'm personally working hard to read every report I can read and to attend every conference that I can make time for to better understand this issue.
If I may, what scientists are telling us is, yes, there have been hockey players and football players who have been diagnosed with CTE. That is a fact. But there are thousands and thousands and thousands of football players and hockey players who have played the game without having CTE. In fact, Dr. Lili-Naz Hazrati, a Canadian neuroscientist, published a report on an autopsy of a woman who, to the best of her family's recollection, had never played sports in her life and had never suffered a concussion, and yet her brain was riddled with CTE.
This is all to say it is a very complicated issue. I'm really not able to be an authority on this subject, so I am just simply following the science.