I was pretty well going to say the same thing. I think that if this legislative committee is going to be a success, we need to work together, and we need to do things the proper way.
One of the things this committee must do is also take the time to listen to the witnesses. It's not a question of us making up our minds and going through the motions. We must receive witnesses and we must listen to them and give them a chance to express themselves. We all know--we've had them in our offices in the last year and a half or several years--that this is the moment. This is the time when we will make a very important decision for all Canadians on copyright. I think it behooves us to work together in a constructive manner. We will need all of us to work together; otherwise, this bill will not be the best bill for Canadians.
I would urge my colleagues across the table not to rush this process. I'll not start talking about delays that have occurred in the past. That's not a constructive way to look at things. But I think that we do honestly need to take the time to do this properly, and I think that members of the opposition, who don't have a small army of people to help us in our deliberations--we are in the opposition and pretty thin on the ground--need to take the time to do this thing properly.