Yes.
Today, the election day in the U.S., when we are talking about polarization and emotion, I don't need to talk to a group of MPs about fake news and frustration with messages being distorted. I don't want to be here whining about this, but it is frustrating when you do have such a strong story to tell and there are groups, many of them outside of Canada, trying to influence Canadian land-based decisions and local community decisions.
The one I would highlight would be the Natural Resource Defense Council built out of the U.S., which is working with some Canadian surrogates to try to lobby companies like Procter & Gamble and others to stop sourcing from Canada. It's spreading misinformation.
Once again, I go back to our public land, the work we do with provincial and federal governments, and the data that the Canadian Forest Service has when it comes to carbon information, and how robust our forests are according to the reports that NRCan issues on the state of Canada's forests every year. We're the only country in the world that I'm aware of that does a formal, comprehensive, full report on the state of our forests. We have an active Canadian Council of Forest Ministers at the provincial and territorial level, which has a lot of information. We're going to stand up for ourselves and our workers, but given the public land piece of this as well, we believe there's more that governments, federally and provincially, can do to speak truth to some of this silliness.