As I mentioned, in 1987, when the first free trade agreement was negotiated with the United States, and continually through the variations that now include Mexico, the softwood lumber product going into the U.S. market has never been a part of that free trade agreement. Ultimately, it's not a free trade agreement, because there are exclusions.
It's an abundant shame because, within that agreement, whatever its flaws, there are processes to be able to dispute that. We can use processes at the U.S. Department of Commerce to appeal these duties, and we can use the World Trade Organization. However, when the U.S. deliberately doesn't fill positions so that we can argue in those, we don't have the ability, outside of these trade agreements. Not including softwood lumber agreements—