That's very helpful because, to get to the table, it is very complex. You need to be able to map it, and you need the resources to do that right.
In the communities that I've worked with, the number one plan, even ahead of economic development, is protecting the land. That's always first and foremost.
When I talk to Cree communities, to Ojibwa communities, to Algonquin communities, I'm hearing again and again about glyphosate. It's killing amphibians. It's killing insects. The moose are not coming back. It's in the blueberries over a year after the cutovers have happened. We've seen the Monsanto papers released, and there are really frightening documents. Bayer has paid out $10.9 billion over cancer claims.
We're hearing this again and again from indigenous communities who are saying they're not going to go along with this any more. What would you say, representing indigenous forestry, in terms of managing the forest with or without glyphosate?