I'm not saying that the home renovation tax credit isn't going to be useful in some sectors. I'm saying that what could be done in terms of increasing to 50 weeks is less than one-sixth of what's going to be spent on the home renovation grants. So the unemployed are paying for other sorts of programs.
I was going to say earlier that the unemployed paid for the deficit to come down. We have documentation from Paul Martin, when he was the finance minister, to the City of Prince Albert saying they had to use the money from UI to pay down the deficit. Well, as someone said earlier, that's not what you paid in for.
In terms of CFIB, I guess you'd have to know whether they're speaking on behalf of their members. The reality is that you have to have a system where people pay into it as a group. If you said why should I pay into UI if I'm not going to have children or those sorts of things--that individual choice--you take out the equality. If they don't want to pay into it, then CFIB had better deal with their members about whether they think it's useful. It's either all in or not.