Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your presentations today. I am sorry for the shortness of time.
The one thing that strikes me is that there is always going to be global ownership, but what concerns us are the local jobs, direct and indirect. It really doesn't matter who owns the company; it's where the paycheques are delivered to.
We've had a lot of good discussions here on trade remedy, and I certainly agree with you. We face this on a number of different issues. It's the agility and timeliness of the trade remedy as much as the rules that are around it. We're seeing Trump coming out now saying that even if there's a WTO recommendation on something, he may not follow it, which flies in the face of rules-based trade.
I was going to drill down just a little bit further. Somebody talked about border measures, and the problem we have is that when you look at the percentage that's used domestically in Canada, we always punch above our weight, and the vast majority of it has to find a home somewhere else. How do you set up border measures that don't create a problem for you trying to export into another market when it reciprocates?