Thank you, Ms. Khalid, for your courage in bringing this motion forward and for testifying here today.
Building on Ms. May's question, I've had a lot of people come to me and ask, “Are you chilling my ability to raise a legitimate question about a faith?” I've said to them, no. One can openly question whether we should have female priests, as a questioning of the Catholic faith, for example. One should be able to legitimately debate aspects of the dietary restrictions on Muslims, for example. But Islamophobia, to me, means uttering death threats, assaulting, hatred, threats of violence towards people, and vandalism of their places of worship. I just want you to comment on that, and how you've responded to that kind of criticism in terms of how you see Islamophobia, because, to me, it has never been a complicated term.