Certainly, I agree with you. The point I made at the beginning of my testimony is a fact that is largely ignored, that the in-shore, small-scale fishery is a huge contributor to our economy. I have to say that Fisheries and Oceans thinks economic efficiency is the answer to all the woes of the fishery. And if you go down that road, we will end up with factory freezer trawlers that employ a fraction of the people employed now.
And of course, there's always the economic efficiency of in-shore fishery. It doesn't fit because it is too narrowly defined. There are so many benefits that flow from that small-scale in-shore fishery. I gave you the numbers. In Atlantic Canada there's $1.8 billion worth of product.... That puts a lot of money in a lot of people's pockets. We can shrink the industry—and that's the tendency of government, to rationalize, rationalize, rationalize and shrink the industry—until Mr. Risley and three or four others are going to own and harvest that resource, and pocket the benefits. We have to think how the benefits are distributed.