You guys ask really great questions—this is wonderful.
How do you monitor and reconcile these things? It's a hard challenge. Tourism is one of the fastest ways of bringing resources, money, and jobs into a community, but it's environmentally disruptive if you don't do it properly. I think a lot of this goes back to aboriginal control, local control, local influence in decision-making. You bring in tourism and other things you can monitor and control yourself.
The question of how we get indigenous communities up to speed on these things is really quite fascinating. I'm a huge fan of aboriginal self-government. I'm strongly supportive of the land claims process and the implementation thereof. As an historian, I would remind everybody here who takes the longer view that 30 years ago nobody would ever have thought we would be where we are now. I was in the Yukon in 1973 when the land claims process started. If you had said that by the year 2009 we would have what we have today, people would have thought you were crazy. There were only a few folks who even dreamed of getting this far. We have a long way to go, but give the indigenous communities a huge amount of credit for what they've done, for their ability to make their own decisions, to get involved and engaged where they can. It's actually worked out far better than we think. There are some great success stories going on already.