Well, it's a little bit like saying we'll end supply management and we'll end those things to get the TPP and then we'll compensate. We're not going to be effectively giving our aid to the right places if we have to compromise with the TPP and we have to allow extensions of patents that cause a scarcity of medicine to those countries.
I spent six and a half years in West Africa. I was right with the poverty-stricken people. I've seen people die of curable diseases because they lack the help, the pharmaceuticals, and all those things. This has been going on and on. We're saying as Canadians that we're compassionate and we want to help change this, and then we get ourselves muddling into a trade agreement that complicates it, when there are all kinds of ways that we can give effective aid that will really help, whether it's restoring the funds that have been taken from the non-governmental organizations which are doing such great work overseas, or whether it's directing our bilateral aid in different countries in a way that's going to really strengthen their health care.