Thank you very much, Madam Lavallée.
From the perspective of the Canadian Library Association, I think education, parody, and satire join the other exceptions to copyright because they're very limited, specific, and fair. To be defined as exceptions, they cannot interfere with the economic interests of the creators. They have to be constrained. They have to be for specific uses. They have to be constrained by all of the six factors that the Supreme Court laid out. They mustn't significantly interfere.
I also think it's part of the initial balance of copyright on striving to achieve a balance between access and protection of the economic interests of the creators.