Yes, for sure. The CNN factor about the Middle East is real. You have many companies thinking that if they go the Middle East, they're going to be threatened, or it will be very difficult.
I can tell you that we've operated in Yemen since 1993, and we have never lost one day of production. We lose way more production days in the Gulf of Mexico because of hurricanes, or in northern Saskatchewan or northern Alberta because of minus 40-degree weather. In Yemen, with all of its issues and problems and challenges, we have never lost a day of production because of violence.
When I tell people that, they ask how that can be possible, because it's a fragile country and maybe we're going to get kidnapped or whatever. We have a thousand employees there. We've never had anyone kidnapped, we've never had anyone killed, and we've never lost one day of production. These are the kinds of messages that we don't get out enough, because we watch TV and we see Afghanistan night after night.
I sometimes wonder how it can be news that there was a bombing in Iraq. After 1,000 days or 2,000 days of saying that every day, how is that news? But that's the drumbeat of what the Middle East is all about, and it's not accurate in any sense of the word. It's very narrow to those two specific countries.