How do you recommend it? Well, one of the things I was speaking to Simon about is what one of my U.S. clients said to me: that if, let's say, you invest in a company and then that company gives $500 million to its competition and you suffer because of that—i.e., through litigation or through, shall we say, predatory pricing—are you acting in the best interests of your shareholders and are you liable? That puts a certain amount of pressure, possibly, on the Canadian industry.
The other point he made was that with the latest ruling of the U.S. Court of International Trade, which he takes very seriously, what he's saying is that the Canadian government should be very prudent as to where the $1 billion goes, because there could be some liability.
Actually, his final conclusion—I may as well share it with you—was this: why not give the money to the victims of Hurricane Katrina? That way, the industry would not incur any liability.