We could, and we'd have pathways then, but right now we're presupposing what we're going to get, and we don't know what's going to come.
If I may, Glen, you and I know what we saw. We would lose three words in four sentences. We could always presuppose that we would know what was in those redacted documents at NSICOP, but we're presupposing now that we're not going to get anything.
I think we have to make a decision on what redactions we have when we get them, and then we have pathways, but we don't have a pathway now. I think asking a law clerk to look at cabinet confidence and at solicitor-client privilege and make a determination of what's right and wrong.... They don't know, to be fair, in many cases, nor should they have access to them.
I'm not suggesting we'll be happy with the redactions. I'm suggesting we won't know until we get those redactions, and then we can make decisions. I don't think we should make them now. That's all.
Thank you for your lenience, Mr. Chair.