I'm not convinced that wireless prices are out of line with those in the OECD world. It is true that certainly if you look at average minutes of usage per month, we are very competitive with prices in the United States, which arguably is the most important one for us to compare ourselves to.
As you know, when you get to Europe and other countries, their wire-line network may not be so good, and the way in which they bill.... It's a different sort of environment. But compared to prices in the U.S., those in Canada are quite competitive.
This issue as well is regulation. By the way, that is why the United States has moved away. They had deregulated because they were concerned that the regulatory environment they had, particularly on wholesale access, was actually preventing investment that was necessary for the infrastructure you've discussed.
You're absolutely right. We must have leading-edge infrastructure, but if our regulatory environment prevents people from getting a return on that investment, then we won't invest. That is what happened in the United States. That is why they changed.