Mr. Speaker, I certainly will bring it into hand. The point I am trying to make through example is that the dollar value the government puts on this treaty is questionable. If I do not reference it to something else then I am simply expressing an opinion. I am trying to solidify and give some substance to the agreement by describing another area where the government made an estimation of the value or the cost but did not live up to it. I believe that is perfectly valid point, and I am sure you agree, Mr. Speaker.
The point I made when I asked for a cost evaluation of the Nisga'a treaty was that the government lowballs the cost or this economist lowballs the cost because I did want not him to come out with an estimate that somebody could criticize and say that he estimated this while it was really down here. A lowball estimate of the cost of the Nisga'a treaty is $1.5 billion not $485 million. That leads me to wonder what the final cost is going to be on Bill C-4.