Thank you very much, Mr. Julian. That's exactly our question: why would we want to do that?
I think what we're going to see is capitulating to a battle or a skirmish that has arisen in the country below us, and we're simply relocating it. What we're now finding is that industry is arguing different points of view. Industry is going to be arguing over some form of allocation—quota share, if you want to call it that—some market share allocation. We're going to rush to the border. We're going to trip over one another.
We have a very unique situation here, that we should appear before this committee. Weyerhaeuser and our company have a very unique relationship. We sell them chips and they need our chips. I'm sure both parties would like to see that relationship flourish. Mr. Perkins has indicated so. They want to keep operations going. We do too. But this deal is not going to ensure that. We'd like to see a resolution by the third parties, and then I really believe, contrary to what I heard from my counterparts, that we'd see results.