The issue of human rights figures in all elements of our relationship with China, and it is raised by all senior officials when they visit China. It's raised in a respectful way, but it is always present and we talk about it.
As the chief trade commissioner, one of the things that strikes me about Canada and Canadian business people is that our business people are effectively ambassadors who have embedded values in them. That's one of the benefits of dealing with Canadians: you get a fair deal. And that's a very important element. When Canadian business people go to China, they're effectively ambassadors for the Canadian way, and they show that you can be honest and upright in your business dealings, the way Canadian firms are generally around the world.
So we have that embedded set of core of values that allows us to pursue our interests. I don't see a separation between the two, or a flight to the bottom. Not at all. It's one of the dimensions of the corporate social responsibility that we have, our expectation of there being a level of behaviour internationally. That figures in what we do and how we do it.