I just have a comment first, as much for the committee as for the members. MADD made a suggestion that sounded great, and normally it would be great, that you would have the thing, but in two years it would automatically go away if there was no reoffence. Had I not been a member of Parliament, and perhaps one beside the United States, I would have thought that was great. The problem is that when you get a record, it doesn't go away in the United States. There are ways to pay and get it off, year by year, but it's a pain in the neck. We've had all sorts of cases.
But that's not my question, and I only get one question.
Mr. White, I feel sorry that you've been here for two hours and no one has asked you a question. I had one for my first round, and that was whether there are other things the automobile industry is coming up with that would be able to stop all of us from drinking and driving. Are there things on the research drawing board that would stop everyone, whether or not they've been convicted, that would be part of a car's mechanism?