That governance system is important for me to look at.
I'm just going to go back to the issue of genetic discrimination. I think you made a very important point in terms of accessing medicare or health care services. In Canada, there wouldn't be any genetic discrimination because universality—one of the five principles of medicare—states that pre-existing conditions, etc., do not preclude you from getting the care you need when you need it. But there is a concern from some people that it does not govern private insurance. For instance, you had car insurance and you had one accident and your premiums doubled; you had a second accident and your premiums tripled; you had a third accident and you're not insurable anymore. Private insurance companies that, say, do life insurance and other types of insurance are already doing that: if you're a smoker your premiums go up. How do you prevent that from happening in a country like Canada where it isn't access to health care services, but looking at other areas of insurance?