Thank you for coming and for a most interesting discussion. I love history, and when I visit a place, oftentimes.... I was up in Smithers, and I was looking at some old pictures. I don't know if anybody has been in Smithers lately, but it is probably much the same as many other towns in British Columbia and Canada in general.
It is fascinating to see what has happened in the last 100 years. It is fascinating to see those pictures of men and women working with horses and cutting trees with handsaws, and to see what has transpired. When I fly over British Columbia, I see all these roads. Those were logging roads at one point. To see the infrastructure that we have as a nation is absolutely phenomenal.
When I go to Vancouver and see the port, and what we are capable of doing.... It is incredible how we have moved forward in the last 100 years. I think much of the western world has. We are not unique, but I am seeing that happening in the underdeveloped countries, too. There seems to be a moving forward. We have talked to some degree about poverty in other nations, but I have been witness to places like China and have seen where they have come in the last 30 or 40 years. It is nothing short of staggering.
Two things come to mind that propel this. Number one is energy. They used to pull these logs with horses, and now we have equipment to do that. Number two is markets, because once you have run out of markets, you have certainly run out of places to bring those goods.
In the course of the discussion, and even this morning, we have heard the pros and cons. On the previous panel there was somebody who discussed with us what the split was across our nation. It is somewhat even. I think there is a little advantage on the pro side. It is for that reason we have come as a committee and have discussed these things with professionals, with people who have a stake.
Knowing that this is the way our economy works.... Everybody has benefited. I think we have all come here in cars; nobody has ridden a horse here. We flew here in a plane. We have reaped the benefits of all these things that our society has managed to produce.
I guess I am going to direct this question to Mr. Redlin. If we find, across the course.... That nice lady in the back was asking what licence we have to make this. We are doing these consultations to ask Canadians. If we find that the majority of Canadians think this is a good idea, will you stand behind that majority of Canadians? I guess the same is true if we hear the opposite.