I don't know about the legalities of it in Canadian law or how you would frame it, but I very much like the idea that we have sanctions against regimes that we find are engaging in activities that are violations of the international rules-based order. We don't deal with North Korea, for example.
I think something similar is important. If we see that these companies are associated with a state that is engaging in behaviour that is grossly violating the principles of the WTO—for example, the barring of our canola seeds—that we would look at it as these companies being required to abide by the demands of their state.
Aside from that, we also have serious issues with Chinese state companies' compliance with Canadian environmental and labour regulations, because they function in Canada in ways that they function in other countries that have looser regulations. I think we have to look at the whole thing—