I'll give you an example. We have, in Canada, a number of non-status Indians who could maybe get status on a reserve in Ontario, and they choose not to. They don't like the system and the process, but that's their choice. It comes back to talking about rights and individual rights when we're talking about UNDRIP and the right to decide who you are and what organization you belong to.
I want to go back to something else we were talking about before, and I understand that and I think that's a question that we have to internalize and talk about and think about. How do we want our members to come on in, feel comfortable, and be good, providing citizens and all of that?
I think there was a question that I think Michael had got to, which I'm going to answer really quickly. That was—