Let's focus on the foreign ownership issue. I think Professor Winseck rightly noted that we've seen this movie before, and it doesn't end well. Certainly the Verizon experience is suggestive of that.
The starting point, quite frankly, is to remove really all barriers and open the market up to foreign entrants. I'm not sure that it's going to result in a fundamental change. When Verizon, as Dwayne said, kicked the tires on Canada, they saw enormous opposition from the big three and just decided Canada wasn't worth their while. There were other places where they could make money without having to fight three large incumbents.
However, opening up the market fully so that a company could think about entering—potentially not just with those assets, but with some of the larger assets as well—might provide at least someone with the perspective that this is an attractive enough market. From a consumer perspective, bringing in that kind of pricing power, that sort of roaming ability on a global level, opens the door, I think, to opportunities that Canadians don't experience, but consumers in many other countries do.