We're saying that it is important to conduct this debate in an open and comprehensive, not piecemeal, manner because we are changing longstanding cultural policies. This is being done through an amendment to the Telecommunications Act that appears in an omnibus bill on the budget. Accordingly, in the current circumstances, it will necessarily pass.
We're saying it is important to have this debate. There are people on both sides of the fence on this subject. Last week, I was speaking to someone who believes it is important to review the Telecommunications Act and the Broadcasting Act and fundamentally to evaluate them together. Other people—and some eminent people whose opinions I was reading last week at a conference that was held here in Ottawa—say that isn't necessary, that there's enough flexibility. We have to have this debate. What is happening is that we are opening the barn door and, afterwards, we'll be wondering if we've done the right thing. That's the danger.