To add to that answer, and talking about the narrative, just around Fort McMurray, I don't know if you guys have been reading lots about the news, but I talked to colleagues who were there and were seeing the oil companies open up their doors, shut down their projects, and just let anyone in who needed safety and security from the wildfires. That community is not going to forget that, and neither will the first nations around the area who received millions of dollars in supplies from these companies.
When you're talking about narrative, we have to look at what literally is happening. Indigenous peoples, when you come down to an individual level, don't feel the benefits of resource development, but they definitely feel the negatives. When Attawapiskat got flooded with sewage when the mine work camp flooded that area, they felt that, but they didn't see the money filter down. That's not to say that money is not being transferred, but when we're looking at single-issue processes versus taking everything including housing, water, all these other social determinants of health into consideration, I think you have to recognize that a lot of these people who are protesting, they feel the negatives not the benefits.