On a general note, I don't like to refer to it as space economy or the economy, because it's all the economy. The economy in space is the economy. Canada must maintain its position to be competitive in that market—that's an argument. It's about people keeping their jobs. It's about education, and it's about a cycle of training people, keeping people and building a sound economic base here in Canada and maintaining that.
I think it's pretty simple for Canadians to understand that we don't do anything. In the 1970s, we put up the GPS satellites, and nobody knew what to do with them. Now you can't do anything without them. That's what space is. It's fundamental to your life. There's nothing you can do on a given day, between a financial transaction at the bank or getting something delivered to your house to eat, that doesn't go through a system that involves a satellite. They're fundamental to the fabric, and very importantly, there's no backward compatibility. We can't go back to the old system of communicating, to the old system of navigating, to dial-up phones. It doesn't work. We're dependent on the space satellite systems, so let's make sure they stay there. The only way to do that is be a good environmentalist and protect the environment.