Well, we didn't put out a press release supporting either the draft order or the direction. I know some of my colleagues did, so they can explain their press releases.
We, at Rogers, absolutely believe that deregulation is the right approach, that market forces are the right approach, and that competition is the right approach. But almost every western country has followed the approach that the CRTC has, where you don't just decide on day one that it's competitive now and let's go. You have a transition period. As I said in my remarks, whether you do it under the proposed order or under the CRTC's decision, that transition period is pretty much over. We're pretty much at the 25%. It is time to deregulate.
My concerns about the way it's being done under the proposed order are the loss of the quality-of-service incentives--I think it would have been very valuable to leave that part of the CRTC order in--and secondly, the winback rules for those markets where there is no competition today. I think you may discover that some of those markets will never get the benefit of competition now that those winback rules will be removed. But I would agree with you that protectionism is a bad thing, that competition is a good thing, and that after the transition period you want to let it rip.