I appreciate that. I have to cut you off, and I'm going to leave it at that. I have a little bit of extra time left, and I want to use it for another question. I appreciate your answer. It's a difficult situation we're all involved in here, but we have to fix it really quickly.
Thank you for that.
Really quickly, then, to move to my second question, with the investments we're making in partnerships and the original Bill C-52, which allowed for the generic production of vaccines for malaria, tuberculosis, AIDS/HIV and enterovirus...the Canadian access to medicines regime is what it has actually come to be. Do the products we're actually producing and putting public money into allow for the entrance into that automatically? This is known formally as the Jean Chrétien Pledge to Africa bill. We've only seen it used once because it is such disastrous legislation. However, will all of the medicines we are actually cofunding through the public purse to help the general public be compliant so that we will be allowed to produce them generically if the developer or the country does not do it at a low cost?