I go back to saying that everybody has a bias. When we look at Health Canada, at the government, at the drug review agencies, at the provincial governments, and at industry, everybody comes with a bias. I think the challenge is to put that bias out there and to be very clear. Unfortunately, there is no such thing as an unbiased report. What you need is a combination of all the stakeholders and to go back to the opportunity for all stakeholders to have access to information. But there's no such thing as being totally unbiased.
I go back to my example of the government reaction to tainted blood. All the decisions can be looked at in terms of the political biases that went into them, both before the inquiry and after the inquiry. None of them were based on pure science. None of them, one can say, carry no bias of the agency, whether it be reactionary or whether it be protective.