I have to tell you, overall it's a good news story for the Canadian Forces. Since the early 1960s, after the Korean War, we've been a declining organization in terms of the size. It wasn't until 2005, when we actually went 180 degrees in the other direction, that we were expanding, and we've continued in that direction.
I must admit there was not a lot of investment and attention paid to recruitment. The Canadian Forces could sort of sit back and rely on certain areas of the country to sustain what we needed at that point in time. In particular regions of the country, like Atlantic Canada, the prairies to some extent, Ontario and Quebec because of their size, and pockets of British Columbia were providing, essentially, a production of white males for the armed forces. What we have to pay a lot of attention to now is that it's estimated that by 2046, white Caucasians in this country will be in a minority, and it's extremely important for us to get out and expand the applicant pool to the diverse nature of what this country actually represents demographically.
So regional focus is extremely important to us, and I didn't want that to be—