I said distilling, but not in the alcoholic sense, I can assure you.
Certainly there was a whole process engaged in by the CRTC to implement the policy directive of 2006. As I said, they reviewed all of their purposes, procedures, and regulations. There's a whole architecture involved there. I think Canadians watching or listening to this hearing should be assured that there was a lot of consideration, a lot of good public policy making, by both the regulator and the government, in this regard. I just want to put that on the record.
There have been 2,200 decisions since the beginning of 2006. As I said, there are several that we feel are outside the policy directive and would have a deleterious impact.
On the UBB decision, I have been very clear. I hope I've been articulate; that's for others to decide. But I've said if you want choice and competition, you can't force down the throats of the independent ISPs a business model that means that they can't compete with their own business model. That's not choice and competition.