Mr. Masse, I think Simon's point is valid. Whether you're a domestic billionaire or a foreign billionaire, you got to be a billionaire by making good economic decisions.
Here is the reality: you build networks to serve customers. If I have a choice between building out Toronto or building out a rural part, I'm going to build out Toronto first because I'm going to get more customers there. In our case, for example, we cover 19 million people. That Windsor to Quebec City corridor is about 16 million people. It makes sense to cover all those people, so you build out for that reason.
On the issue of control, again, I'm not the lawyer, so I can't comment on these complex structures, but here's what I learned a long time ago. There's this thing called the “golden rule”, and ironically it was Michael O'Connor, who works for these folks, who taught me the golden rule. When I looked at potentially joining them before I joined Public Mobile, I was asking a bunch of questions about how the company was going to be run. I was wondering where these decisions would be made. Michael told me that Naguib Sawiris believes in the golden rule. I asked him what the golden rule was, and he told me, “He who provides the gold rules.”
At the end of the day, controlling shareholders do make decisions. The golden rule will always hold true.