So that's absurd. No one could justify that. I know that the adoptive parents lobbied heavily during that period to say they needed to come in as citizens, because sponsorship took quite a few years and during those years they didn't have the rights of a Canadian citizen. I remember that big lobby campaign, and the Conservative government said you're absolutely right. That's why the first thing they did--I remember Diane Finley--was to change the bill. Everybody was celebrating and saying this was great. I said it was great. Everybody said it was great without knowing that now they've messed up.
I'll put that problem aside.
Allan Nichols, I was in Japan, Tokyo, Beijing, and Shanghai with the foreign affairs minister for a few days, and at that time there were several meetings with very successful business people, people working and doing a lot of business, employing a lot of people both in Canada and elsewhere. Foreign Affairs hosted this dinner. It was interesting that after the dinner I had several people come up to me and say they were really worried because if they had a kid there, they might actually have to leave, go home, and stop the business so that they could have their child in Canada. They were telling me how absurd it is because it really limits their business. They are Canadian. They have Canadian firms here.
Is that something you're hearing now, that they're really worried?