That's the part you've mentioned—risk management. Do we want to keep people in the north and have them rely totally upon government, or do we want them to rely, like the rest of Canada, on a combination of services and private enterprise as a way to grow the economy?
I mentioned diamond mines on purpose, because they actually employ local people. They grow the economic base of the community, rather than having government dictate. Everybody works for the government in one way or the other, because they're the only people who are doing anything about the economy in the north. That's not a very good way to run a country, and that's why you have to have an economic base, an economic reality.
There's only so much ecotourism and those other things, and development need not be counter to the environment. You can use the best practices known to human beings to develop the resources that are there, create the employment, the economic viability, and then we won't have to talk about Arctic sovereignty—it would just be there. Would you not agree?