Mr. Speaker, I thank the member for giving me the opportunity to repeat in this House what I said Friday night in Kamloops, as can be read in the transcripts. Please excuse my English; it won't be very long.
Do you know how many groups in the world give themselves collective identity? Experts say that it is between three thousand and five thousand. There are not two hundred states in the United Nations. So don't let—in this beautiful country of Canada—don't let the Lucien Bouchards win with a separation. Because there are too many Lucien Bouchards through the world who would create a mess in this country—in Africa, Asia, in many places in the world—if we say that there is no future for the co-habitation of—