There's a fundamental problem here. I've heard the Conservatives talk about thousands of jobs disappearing across the country. When I go into Montreal, I see the enormous growth in the video game industry, and when I go to Vancouver or Toronto, I hear people talking to me about tax credits and other incentives. To say that the entire entertainment industry will fall if this bill isn't done by March 29 is part of the false copyright bogeyman that I think has made people really mistrust the issue of copyright. They're saying this is not the reality; the reality is that key elements of this bill are problematic. We've said that again and again and again.
This isn't about creating the picture-perfect bill; this is about fixing a bill that has fundamental problems. There are going to be times in this clause-by-clause study when we're going to come across those problems. To treat the serious problems of the bill the same as we're treating the title of the bill and the lesser amendments... Those lesser amendments are going to move fairly quickly, I think, but there are certain key parts of the bill that we really need to sit down and discuss. That's our job as parliamentarians. We're not holding anything hostage here. We're doing due diligence for all the organizations we met.
If we treat key provisions of the bill just like anything else and shut down debate, then we'll be going back to the various sectors that we promised due diligence to and telling them we're sorry, but we had to blow through it and we did not do our work.
I'm asking members of the committee to show some respect for one another and recognize that we are all here for the right reason, which is to get this copyright bill done and to fix the problems in it so that we can say we did our job as parliamentarians. That's what we want to do, and that's why we do not want to have this time closure invoked against the key amendments to the bill.