Even if you are wrong.
The fact of the matter is that you are right, Richard, in that there are only so many negotiators and we are falling behind in the U.S. market. There has been a lot of discussion, but the big market that we're really extremely concerned about in the agriculture sector is the Korean market, and that's where the government has to step up to the plate.
I wanted to comment as well on the Japanese market as it relates to canola. There's no question—they're a premium market. But they're also a very closed market when it comes to value added.
Prince Edward Island sells them a lot of non-GMO canola. They're going to assure themselves that they're getting the quality they ask for and that it is non-GMO. They come to Prince Edward Island once a year and they inspect the fields. If there's a GMO field of anything within close proximity of that non-GMO canola field, that product is not going to get shipped. They are a premium market, but you had better produce premium or you're not going to be in that market, and you had better ship what you said you were going to ship.
What is the difference between canola seed and canola oil on tariffs? Do you know? The door is basically closed on value added. That's the point I'm trying to make. How do we open that?