Thank you very much.
Ms. Fyfe, I acknowledge your courage all the more. I know how it is: my father was raised in Saskatchewan, on a farm in Shaunavon, and today there are no more farms or villages in the entire region. It's very small, virtually no one is left, older people are still there, and that's all.
You told us a lot about the advances you've made. You told us about a pension fund which you, women farmers, and farmers' wives, can access. It's true that it's thanks to you that we eat every day. I like eating, so I want you to continue existing; that's important for me.
But you told us some things I don't understand. Last week, when the Wheat Board was transformed, 62% of farmers voted in favour of that transformation. You're telling us that's not a good thing, that it's not right that it was transformed. So I don't understand. Yesterday there were questions on the subject in the House, and we were told that no farmers were talking about it. Last night, I listened to a Liberal Party debate on the subject. They said that the Liberal Party wasn't putting farmers...
You're a farmer. Can you tell us how that changes your situation? How does the fact that the Wheat Board has been changed make the situation tougher?