I think the point I was making is that what's so revolutionary about the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act is that it provides that you cannot import anything from there. It's not just a whole phone; it's also the bits. It's the constituent parts, and that makes a big difference.
I was coming to address your point. Complexity is not a reason not to do it, and we do have some interesting new tools. For example, with organic materials, there are companies like Oritain. Oritain isn't the only company. There are companies like Oritain that have isotopic maps of various parts of the world and have technology so sensitive that they can take a hair on your head and tell you where you've been over the past six months. Any organic material they can test, and they can tell you whether or not it comes from Xinjiang.
We don't need to be doing this all-encompassing thing here. We can spot-check companies, and some companies do have contracts with Oritain and other similar organizations. There are ways around this. I don't believe in the capacity argument. It's a question of political will, but we do have to have the legislative tools, and at the moment, I believe that really only the U.S. does when it comes to Uyghur forced labour.