I get the frustration, but I still think that argument skips over the scale of the jump Irving is making. The Hero class and AOPS absolutely should have helped mature the yard, the workforce, and the production rhythm, and nobody is wrong to say that after two classes the shipyard ought to be performing better than a cold start. But the River class is not just “more of the same with a known hull and machinery.” It is a far more complex combatant, with a heavily Canadianized Type 26 baseline, new systems integration, new production sequencing, and a first-of-class learning curve that was always going to be ugly. Irving started the production test module in June 2024, moved to full-rate production in 2025, and by January 2026 had publicly reached the first major unit lift-and-flip milestone for HMCS Fraser, with keel laying still expected later in 2026. That is not lightning fast, but it is also not evidence that nothing is happening. The sixth and final RCN AOPS was delivered in August 2025, so the yard has in fact completed one class and is transitioning through the tail end of that work into the next one, not sitting idle with no experience at all.