Mr. Chairman, I didn't mean to make fun of you. I used to have your job a long time ago, as you mentioned. You're doing a great job.
Taiwan is a fascinating case. There's a lot of hepatitis in Taiwan, as you probably know, and a lot of people from Taiwan I think used to go to China. The mayor of Taipei right now is Mayor Ko, and he's a transplant surgeon. He won in an absolute landslide. It was about a year and a half ago. He went over to China and made inquiries about where they could get organs in China. In one hospital in one city he went to, they told him they only had Falun Gong organs available for transplants, so he came back and gave an interview with Ethan Gutmann about this, and Ethan's book came out just in the middle of the election campaign in Taipei.
We were travelling in a car in B.C. together and there were phone calls every five minutes, because this was getting to be very embarrassing. Ethan has a very high opinion of Mayor Ko, and Mayor Ko won in a landslide with 700,000 votes or something. He's a good guy on this, believe me.
If Taiwan can do it with both parties' support, why on earth can't we in Canada, with all-party support, do a similar type of measure?