I don't know. I would push to have it done as soon a possible, but we're approaching this from several different angles, including that one. My objective would be just to continue raising concerns about this.
We are all economic actors. When we're confident, we move. When we aren't, we don't. The greatest inducement to travel is ease of travel. I think that, on the part of all Canadian citizens and citizens of the United States, travel between our two countries, at least in terms of using the land ports of entry, has become much more difficult. My concern is that, over time, people will adjust their economic behaviour to avoid the cross-border experience at those land ports of entry. I don't think that is good for Canada. I don't think it's good for the United States.
Those are the kinds of things that, in the aggregate, will influence people's decisions about whether or not they are going to decide to travel. We talked about your golf courses over in Canada—