That's an excellent point.
I will throw out one other aspect, which is how do we look at the trend forward?
Barry mentioned Tata. Two weeks ago Tata launched a car called the Nano for $2,500. Projecting down the road, what will happen to the auto industry in North America? I don't have to say that it's going to change what we have. That is a trend that we have to look forward on. It's going to change everything we do in the automobile industry here, because it's going to come here.
So you are raising an excellent point. The trends are important because they tend to be global. We know of a couple of trends that have taken place--for example, the Internet and the disappearance of distance.
There are things we have to do; that's absolutely correct. We have to have think tanks that will look at these trends and create the policies ahead of what's going to happen or we will never catch up. We have to focus on industries that are going to provide us with this innovation, that will give us the areas that are important to us.
By the way, the expertise that we have is sought after. When Tata built the car, they used Canadians from Montreal to look at the engine. They don't have all the answers. We have a lot of the answers they are seeking. If we call the policies right by predicting trends and adopting policies correctly, we can become a big partner, because they cannot do it alone. They may have the market, they have the size, but we have the expertise, and we are still sought after by them.