Mr. Julian, I've never been able to understand how you manage to practise such ridiculous economics.
I have to say that in the market we are in today, we have injected over $5 billion in cash into the coffers of Canadian companies so that they can survive a very difficult market. Why is the market difficult, Mr. Julian? It's difficult because the U.S. housing market has crashed. It has crashed probably worse than it has crashed in fifteen or twenty years. Lumber prices are lower than they have been for fifteen or twenty years. That has absolutely nothing to do with the softwood lumber agreement. In fact, if we did not have the softwood lumber agreement, we would be facing anti-dumping duties and more countervailing subsidy allegations that would be taking duties up to 20% or 30%. Very recently, we have had briefings from the very best American lawyers in the business who have told us exactly that: that if we lose the softwood lumber agreement, we're going to have a very big problem, and I'd like you to wear it if that happens.