Being pragmatic is very important. The reality is that by not being pragmatic at the start of this, by letting it drag on and drag on, we've gotten what we've gotten. We could have solved this with Trudeau and Obama with TPP, because that was the NAFTA replacement. We wouldn't be here today if they had gone down that road. This government chose not to, so Obama chose not to put any equity into it either. We could have avoided all this, but it is what it is.
If you want to talk about being pragmatic moving forward, then any uncertainty that's sitting in the industry right now is still sitting there even though you have a trade deal. I think a lot of companies said, “Oh, great; we have a trade deal. The uncertainty is gone. We'll get back to normal.” Yet if you talk to anybody in manufacturing in the steel sector, no. In fact it's worse, because they don't know anything more today and we were given this false sense of security that this was all going to be solved.
Mr. VanderVeen, let me give you a chance to answer this. Do you feel better today or are you more concerned about your future today than you were, let's say, six months ago?