Yes, I did, and very eloquently, too.
The trouble with the wording we have with CPC-2 is the fact that it could lead to legal challenges with the Canadian pension funds, for example. If there is a reciprocal protection of investments from the other side, then Canadian pension funds could face potential legal challenges.
We're sort of protecting from that by narrowing CPC-2. It's a threefold narrowing. One is changing it from 21 days to 45 days, just to make it more realistic based on the officials' comments. The second is to make sure that the investor gets notified. Last, it's to make sure that it's applied to SOEs in countries we don't have trade agreements with, just to narrow CPC-2 to make sure we don't open up what could be perceived as Canadian companies that are seen as state-owned enterprises to legal challenges abroad.