I understand your question.
I think this comes back to the previous point I made about what the most appropriate way is to support businesses in achieving that scale. Is it acceptable for us to allow businesses to merge in order to achieve the scale they need to, say, cover Canada with telecommunications infrastructure or to compete internationally on the world stage, allowing them to essentially exploit consumers and reduce competition domestically?
The funny thing about the [Technical difficulty—Editor] it privileges businesses that have these expensive, expansive infrastructures. The number one user of the efficiencies defence, historically, has been Superior Propane, which is the company I talked about in my opening remarks. They operate a propane distribution network and have successfully used the efficiencies defence three times. Two of those times they were permitted to create full-blown monopolies in several communities across Canada.
There's a trade-off if we choose to create a mechanism like the efficiencies defence to achieve scale. I think scale is important. If Shaw and Rogers are committed to expanding their networks to serve rural Canadians, that is good and important, but I question whether this tool is the right approach, in part because it cripples the competition [Technical difficulty—Editor] ability to protect consumers. I think that's really the core of the public outrage that we're seeing with respect to this merger.