Yes, it's just simple to respect Canada's own Constitution and recent Supreme Court of Canada decisions, from the Delgamuukw case to the William case, especially since we hold up the William case. The Supreme Court of Canada says to recognize aboriginal rights and title. Again, from an indigenous person's perspective, we're sharing this beautiful country called Canada. We're sharing the resource wealth. We're not supposed to be poor in our own homeland, but that's what we see.
We need to be involved every step of the way, not only on domestic agreements when it comes to developing land and resources, but on international agreements. We have not been involved with NAFTA, and the United States is Canada's biggest international trading partner, but we're not involved as indigenous peoples and we want to create economic stability. Yes, from a first nations perspective, that's our way. It's balancing the environment and the economy always, so we have to be there.
With FIPA, we should be concerned greatly about FIPA and China and how they're going to be looking at coming into Canada. That's another agreement we weren't involved in, and this is all going to impact on rights and title.
Again, it comes back to creating economic certainty to make sure we're involved, to make sure that we balance the environment and the economy, but have our rights in section 35 of Canada's own Constitution respected.