I would like to know a few things, based on the folks who have made great representations to us, and I thank them for being part of that today.
I'm taking a historical perspective, if I can, after the Second World War. Japan had a reputation from the standpoint of manufacturing that, frankly, wasn't very positive. I recall back when I was a young kid growing up—and it wasn't in the forties, but it certainly was in the fifties—that something that was made in Japan wasn't a high-quality product. It was breakable, replaceable, perhaps even able to be copied, who knows. Regardless, it wasn't considered a high-quality product. They've gone through a phenomenal rebranding. They've gone to a point where we've heard comments around this table about quality.
I'd like to understand a little bit better, please, what Japan did, from your perspective. Do you have an opinion on this? What allowed them to go from the perception that I have, and I think that was a fairly reasonable one, to one where now, frankly, they have a great reputation and a well-deserved one? Do you have any thoughts about that?