Yes. I think that's the real crux of the issue here. The Conservatives made us a digital backwater, when you look at the fact that we have had erosion of our position in the world's standings. With your directive change in 2006 to focus in this direction, it's not surprising that we've ended up in this situation.
I think that's what needs to be fixed if we're going to go forward on this. Simply just overturning this isn't going to work; there needs to be more work on what happened in terms of that directive. I am curious, though—I know you're using the terminology of electricity and oil as a measurement in those crude.... It seems a little simplistic when you look at, for example, residential use. Residential businesses use it. People use the Internet for research. It's not just Netflix. People use it for all kinds of different elements, and depending on the data you're downloading, it would affect your usage as well.
Are you not concerned that once again there are two standards, one for commercial and one for business? It's interesting. Some people have told me that's why it worked. They download there versus at home, because they got capped. That's not good for the workplace. First, if you get caught doing that, that's not good. Second, productivity is there.
You're not concerned we're going to create a culture where people are going to look for shortcuts that way? Shouldn't we be trying to solve that by increasing capacity?