I'll try to answer that.
The first thing I'd like to say is that Mr. Krane was characterizing my testimony as a blanket thing for all investments, and I was talking about a particular lens for the nature of the externalities and spillovers from technology, which is absent from the contemporary economy.
For MP Longfield, I'm for Canada here. When we look at these things, we've learned that technologies affect our health, affect our security and affect our economy, so when you interview stakeholders, the most important thing is that this is supposed to be a public good, a net benefit test, in which you look at the overarching effects of these things. You should interview many stakeholders, but ultimately, you need experts to measure these various effects. I've had considerable interplay with those who administer the ICA, and Huawei is considered a Canadian company because it has a Canadian subsidiary. They ask us to voluntarily bring forward things if we're taking investment because there might just be a problem, and I'm deeply involved with a number of technology companies.
People are making decisions based on their narrow and specific interests, and it's up to our policy community to make sure that these are in our national interests.