Mr. Montour, I wonder if I might ask you a question.
You said earlier--and I take your point, and I agree with you--that you have warning labels on packages as companies do, and you're not here to say whether it's good or it's bad, or whether tobacco is good for us, not good for us, or whatever. Nor am I, by the way. I would like everybody not to smoke, but that's not my job here on this committee; my job is to look at what provides a fair and legal playing field for people.
So we take these producing machines, which don't have licences. They're not licensed, so clearly they're now illegal. If we could remove that from the argument for a minute, how much of the rest of the product—the filters, papers, etc.—would taking the machines away take care of? Would we still have a fairly large chunk to deal with, as it relates to the things that go into the cigarette other than the tobacco?