I'll start.
I'll just go back to the context that is so important here. It's so important because it's easy today, literally three years after the pandemic started, to think out of context about the terms and conditions that were negotiated.
I say this because it's so important. We already have forgotten how it was to be under curfew in Quebec, to be in long-term care facilities that were completely closed and you could not see your grandma, your parents or anybody. We've already forgotten, I think, the pain that the country went through as we went through the pandemic and how we turned over every stone.
Fabien talked about Pfizer bringing millions of doses of vaccines. It was more than they were planning for. It was the same thing with Moderna. We negotiated with the U.S. to get the first doses out of the U.S. to come to Canada so that we could get the two-dose summer that was promised to Canadians.
I can tell you that we have all worked together with parliamentarians and government officials for the benefit and the greater good of Canadians.
I'm a Canadian, and I'm from Trois-Rivières. This was done for our benefit. It's important to keep that in mind when we look at contracts. Things shouldn't be based on what we know today.
Hindsight is 20/20, but it's important to look at things in the context of the crisis we were going through. It's also important to understand that confidentiality is super-important in that context as well. We were able to move quickly and have the flexibility to do what we needed to do for the country because we had safeguards. Changing the rules of engagement as we progress in a partnership makes it difficult to create a predictable, stable and secure environment.
I want to leave you with my personal perspective. I think context is very important. I can assure you that personally, it was the craziest two years of my whole career. I would not do it any differently, and it was for the greater good of Canadians.