I think we can both answer the question.
Amazon is not an ideal example, because they got to set the rules in a way that was mostly advantageous to them. If they hadn't set their RFP the way they had, I would love to have been able to bring Canada together and say, “Okay, no one city can house 50,000 employees. No one city can offer everything Amazon wants. How about if we do some of the AI and developments in Montreal; a lot of the other development, all of the cybersecurity and all of whatever else they needed to do, in Vancouver, with some in Winnipeg; and we split the country in three or four, where we have 12,000 and 10,000 and 5,000?” I would liked to have been able to do that.
I'd like to be able to do that for the next Amazon, one that doesn't come and say, “You can't do that”—which they did. They said, “One city, one bid”, and Ian is well aware of it.