Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
It's interesting talking about all this business, because on the one hand these are very Orwellian thoughts.
My friend here is using a BlackBerry, and I understand that if you're in a private meeting you'd better leave your BlackBerry outside the room, because someone can use it as a transmitter. If you have some confidential information, and you're on your cellphone in the Centre Block, you'd better be careful you're not blabbing too much, because someone can pick it up. It's rather frightening. On the other hand, people don't seem too concerned about security at airports, having cameras in convenience stores, banks, airports, because they're worried about their personal safety.
When you're talking about all these things, we say we have to protect our privacy, but on the other hand—and you say the public is concerned about that—the same public is also interested in protecting personal safety and has absolutely no problem being searched at the airport and practically strip-searched at the airport. They are terrified something's going to happen on a plane or other places. They are concerned about going into a convenience store and some strange thing happening there, so they don't mind the cameras being there. Can you go too far either way?