The short answer is absolutely.
The long answer to the question is how do we responsibly deal with the issues the country has created over 200 to 300 years of history? I think that would show a maturity in terms of us as a country dealing with the issues. I think it deals with the future of Canada as well, 48% of the population being under the age of 25—that's your future labour force. That's the future of the country, and if you want to celebrate Canada at 175 in a positive way, I think we need to deal with the issue now.
That's also the future workforce of the country. There's a huge aboriginal population in Métis and first nations communities who want to work, who want to go to school, who want to participate in the booming economy in many areas like Saskatchewan, Alberta, and other areas and be engaged within it.
Youth programming is critical: investing in friendship centres and other institutions to bring youth in, both through education and family programming, those key elements of the responsible social democracy that we are. That's a real legacy project for Canada at its 150th, to reinvest in its own people that way.
So the answer to that is yes, absolutely.