Oh, jeez, I thought I was going to get away with that.
I'll continue with the say on pay. Canada is actually considered a laggard in that respect. One example is Steinhafel, from Target. I think it was 11 Zellers stores that were operating. They were doing okay, but they weren't exceptional. Zellers was taken over by the owner of a U.S. corporation, a giant that ran them into the ground essentially. He threw out a bunch of workers who had pay and benefits. Zellers was a profitable corporation. It essentially went bankrupt, and he walked away with, I believe, $61 million in compensation from that endeavour.
What is it that makes us different, that we can't have some say in pay with part of this amendment? You were mentioning consensus a lot. Don't they have consensus on gender equity? Some of these boards are in some of the most diverse places in Canada, and they don't actually have diversity on the board, and there's no penalty for it as well. I think that when we're looking at changing a bill only twice in 40-plus years, it's a major opportunity to correct and empower shareholders in a much-changing society. Norway has done it differently from the way we have, as an example. Where do we have an option?
Maybe we don't want absolute consensus on this—I don't know what your definition of consensus is—but what specifically can we do in the immediate and maybe long term to include more say on pay?