Maybe we could go back to the other questions you had. That's a hard question. It's a very important question for Canada and, frankly, it's an important question for the United States.
It is abundantly clear that political pressure is curtailing public health advice from the U.S. government. There's no question. The President himself has effectively admitted it.
The President was asked earlier today if he was kidding when he said the government should slow down COVID testing; and his response was that he doesn't kid.
There is clearly intense political pressure on U.S. public health officials. I still have great confidence in the people of the CDC and the people of the NIH. I think we're not hearing nearly enough from them. I trust what I hear from the CDC, from people like Tony Fauci, but I think you have to triangulate. The CDC is clearly not being allowed to speak in an unfettered way. The last time we heard from the CDC in an unfettered way was late February, when Dr. Nancy Messonnier said there was going to be a lot of disruption to American lives. That so upset the White House that they spent days walking back that comment, but she was of course completely correct.
I would very much like to get back to a point when we can hear that kind of unfettered truth from the CDC again. We haven't heard it in a long time, and they clearly feel very curtailed politically, so I think it's best to triangulate on it. Just to complete the point, you have to triangulate between that and what you're hearing from public health commentators in the U.S. more broadly, and I think that's what the U.S. public is doing right now.