Ray has done a good job bringing work to Canada. I think he's a great Canadian. He's my co-chair on the investment committee for CAPC, so I have to say nice things about him, and I do. He's a real champion for Canada.
Take a look at what General Motors is looking at. I'd like to see them on the product mandate in Oshawa. They do a lot with technology. Leading-edge lightweight technology is here, and what they're saying internally is—and they compete for mandates in their worldwide enterprises—there are more Ph.D.s in artificial intelligence in Canada than anywhere else in the world.
That's the type of thing that sells the future.
At the end of the day we don't just want to create little research centres. We want to have research centres tied with production capacity, because in innovation—and we have an innovation agenda—two-thirds of the innovation in our industry tends to be processed innovation, and you can't improve what you're making unless you're making stuff here in the first place.
That's why it is so important to make things.
The United States has figured it out with a reshoring of manufacturing. The President is focused on that. We have to focus on that as well.