Thank you, Mr. Chair.
If you want to know when the next election is going to be—I want to put this into our official Hansard—you ask the taxi drivers. They know everything in this city, and they know better than any political staffers.
My colleagues in the Conservative Party are coming forward with a very interesting legal position. Their position is that the market is superior to legislated rights in the law. If the market decides something, it trumps rights that have been actually codified.
I'm interested in this because it seems to me that they're offering a series of rights that you might not be able to access, and we're being asked to pass that through the House of Commons.
Does it stand in any other form of legislation that you create a two-tier set of rights, one that exists in an analog world and one that can simply be trumped by a corporate decision in L.A.?