I would refer the members to a series of submissions that have been made by one of the top experts in small business and family wealth in the country, a man out of Winnipeg, Manitoba, by the name of Doug Nelson. He has made several submissions. I've read them all, and one of them is 45 pages long, so it's not light reading. He breaks down very clearly that the families of small business people making $75,000, $100,000, $125,000—not the $200,000 or $250,000 numbers that have been tossed around in the media—are absolutely impacted. He illustrates why in detail. And let's not forget that this income has already been taxed at the business level before it is withdrawn as personal income.
The other challenge is the lack of encouragement to entrepreneurship. To go into business, men and women often walk away from well-paying jobs, where they might even have a pension. They often put their mortgage on the line along with their family savings and sometimes their parents' family savings to take risks that allow them to create jobs and drive the economy, which we desperately need them to do. To discourage these people from playing this critical role in our economy is one of the worst things a government can do. If I had to isolate one thing, that would be it. It's taking away that emotional drive that worries us, not just the particular policy.