 The strength of this country is founded on your respect and your understanding for the importance of family as the most important social unit in any society. Japan thrives because families are strong. My job as a politician is not to try and make sure that I can raise people's families for them. It's not to try and instill my values in other people's children. But I can do this to try and make families strong. I can try and make sure that there are enough jobs created in our promise by getting out of the way of business investment, that families can go to work and that they can have a paycheck to take home every two weeks to put food on the table for their children. And that's why I believe my role as the Premier of British Columbia is to first invite you to British Columbia, give you a reason to invest in our promise, and then second, once you've decided to invest there, to do everything I can to get government out of your way so that you can turn that investment into economic activity as soon as possible. I have been honored to speak to you today. We have so much to offer each other. For 150 years, Japanese immigrants have been building British Columbia, and in return, in trading with Japan, Canadians have been helping build this country too. I look forward to continuing to build our countries together. And remember this, that when you look across the ocean, the very first thing that you will see is British Columbia, because that is where our great country begins. Thank you very much.