No, that's good. I have a main question I'd like to get to, actually.
In our work over here, we're really trying to speak for the victims and people who are not yet victims, to make sure the perpetrators haven't reoffended again. The vast majority of evidence is that there's not a deterrent function, but the one element that I think Mr. Muise brought up, and certainly the chief of police and the Attorney General, that might be a rationale—not necessarily data, but it might be a rationale—is incapacitation. I'd like to talk to Mr. Rosenthal about this.
The evidence also shows that people who are incarcerated as opposed to the various other options--a longer incarceration quite often makes them less safe when they come out of prison. In that all of these people will be coming out, this is going to be short-term gain for long-term pain, and society will actually be less safe because of this type of extra incarceration and lack of other more productive alternatives for judges. Could you comment on that?