I appreciate the comments, and I'm sure all of us who are elected officials appreciate your compliment, and we would extend that compliment back, obviously, for those who are in governance and take on the role.
You used the term “right-sizing” earlier, and in part of the governance piece you talked about making decisions. But in some of those decisions for cooperatives, in some cases—and it depends on their bylaws and their constitutions—there's actually a vote about rights. If we can use the term “right-sizing”--I'm not always sure I actually like that term--It tends to be a commercial term from big corporations, which usually means employees are getting laid off. But in nine times out of ten what it means for co-ops is they've come to a point where they have to make a decision about should they merge, should they wind up, should they go somewhere else. But they make the decision. It's more of a democratic decision-making process than it is—and I'll use the auto sector, since that's where I come from—somebody sitting in a Detroit board office saying we're closing.