I would tend to agree that in Ottawa there was intense frustration. Elsewhere, there was a sense of unexpectedness, in the sense that we were dealing with a situation—and I want to emphasize this point—where we didn't know where the next protest was going to happen and we weren't able to have the intelligence, through police channels or social media, that would give us a good sense of that.
We had demonstrations pop up and rolling protests involving large trucks, potentially impairing access to critical infrastructure. For us, it was in part what we knew, but also in part what we didn't know, and that was coming across.