I keep thinking of Sisyphus, the poor guy in classical Greece who was always pushing the rock up the hill, and it was always rolling back on him. We consider our challenge to be pushing that rock up the hill. We consider it our mission to do what we can to inform and educate Canadians and make them aware of what is a rich and distinctive past.
But that is the challenge, and it is a challenge in a country in which many of our provinces don't teach history. Or, if they do teach history, they don't teach it in a way that really reaches kids. It's social studies or some variation of that; it may not indeed be history. There is a report card that the Dominion Institute published in its life and we will continue to do that. So there is that attitude of living in a society in which what you're saying may be falling on deaf ears. You hope that's not so, but that's the challenge.
Then, of course, there are resources. We're not unrealistic. We know that we're not an essential service in life. We are not the police. We are not the fire service. We're not as sexy, perhaps, as some causes. We're not about cancer. We are history and we are awareness and we hope we can make that case to our very generous donors in the private sector and, of course, the government, which accounts for much of what we do. But that is always a challenge.
Those two things, as we go forward, are what we're conscious of all the time.
Marc may want to add a comment.