 Our parents and grandparents built this place. Built healthcare, universities, schools, roads, our hydro facilities. They are the envy of the world. And they did it in the 1950s and 60s when economic growth was sometimes 8%. We have not seen 6%, 7% and 8% growth in 40 years. In 40 years. And now in the western world, most economies are looking at about 2% growth. So the challenge that we have here in British Columbia is to decide that we want to manage decline, be happy with 2% growth, and try and find a way to fix around the edges the institutions that are crumbling that our parents built. Or we can decide that we want to grasp growth. We can decide that 2% isn't good enough for British Columbia, that we want to grow faster by seizing economic activity, by encouraging the private sector to do what it does best and put people to work. We can decide to say yes to economic growth. And in doing that, we will buck the trend of jurisdictions around the western world because we will not be managing decline. Here in British Columbia, we will be deciding, we say yes to growth. And we will be deciding we want to make a different future for our kids, the kind of future that our parents and grandparents created for us. And I believe that they deserve absolutely nothing less than that. Thank you very much for coming.