I was thrilled that I was a member of the special committee that looked into cooperatives in Canada. There's another example that I use. I think it's a very similar model. The reason that social enterprise is created in communities is the same reason that cooperatives were created in communities: there was a need that was identified by a group of people.
Maybe I'll get Lars or Justin talk about this. Do you see that similarity in the co-op model and social enterprise model? Really, communities are reacting to needs they have that are not necessarily delivered by direct government services. They've recognized a need, a neat idea, a collaborative, something they can do to make their communities better places. Is that not the kind of thing you're directly involved in?
I'm probably done, right?