I don't want you to think I am against competition; I think it is extremely important and good for the marketplace. I was just trying to give caution. We have opened the market in Canada to competition over the last 20 years. It is taking maybe more time than we would have liked for people to be a lot more competitive. Maybe it's because when we decided to have competition the market was so open to accepting new players that without offering necessarily competitive rates they were able to get customers and become the companies they are now, with the profit margins we saw this morning.
It's about being very careful about introducing new foreign or other players in the marketplace. There is only a certain capacity of frequencies that are accessible for the market anyway. Right now we are probably at about eight or ten companies that have access to spectrum for mobile service in a very small country. If you look, Great Britain and France wanted to have more companies and they've had to pull back.
When satellites were developed in the early 1980s, the British government decided to have competition in the availability of signals through satellite in the British market. There were two players, and even in the British market the economy couldn't support two. So now there is only one player in Great Britain for satellite service.