It's very, very important.
My question really deals with the legal perspective here. My background is law--11 years as a litigator, an ambulance chaser, if you like. I did a lot of litigation, a lot of personal injury, and I just don't get it. We have Australia, where I lived for three years, the U.K., the United States, all with very similar postal systems. Australia has much smaller streets than we do, especially rural. The United States and the U.K. have much smaller streets as well, and yet all of them seem to be doing an effective job in delivering mail to rural post boxes. They do.
What makes our country any different, first of all, and why do we have this issue when the United States, quite frankly--I have litigated some files from there as well--is a much more litigious society than we are? They litigate much more over many more things and they don't seem to have these problems. Yet we do have them.