I wouldn't say aluminum. I know that steel and aluminum, for instance, are very different given the nature of how they go back and forth between the U.S. and Canada, so that adds another character to the whole thing. In terms of “rip and ship”, if we're getting crude out of the ground and shipping it, that's one point of sale. If we have downstream activities to process it a bit more, to do something more with it, we're creating jobs. That's what I'm trying to refer to, instead of just shipping things raw.
Agricultural products are the same thing. Can we not at least add a few more things in the downstream economy so we can add value and good jobs before we ship them out? It's about thinking through an industrial policy that keeps adding to growth and good jobs to the equation.