This is funny, because when you are in some other country, you always have the Canadian Chamber of Commerce. For example, there is one in Peru, one in Chile and one in Argentina. It's like every company would like to be Canadian. Of course we created our own success. If you look at the Toronto Stock Exchange today, it's the main exchange for the mining industry worldwide. In the beginning it was London. Today everybody wants to be in Toronto. Now, does it make them Canadian companies? That's another story.
The other problem we're facing—and I've said this before—is the junior industry. There are really two different industries—the junior exploration and the senior extraction are two different worlds. As I said, the juniors try to work according to the standards we have discussed; however, along the lines sometimes—and that's probably what happened if they were a junior in Colombia—then they have to sell all they have, and they don't really bother to the extent that they should.