Yes. My office has always been very critical of the idea of developing a national identity card because you can see, just from the short presentation, that if we can't keep control of the very disparate, fairly soft kinds of identity we have, I don't think—among other things, apart from the freedom and civil liberties implications—that we are ready to go to much stronger kinds of identity, because we don't know how to protect that kind of identity. I'm sure that at some point Mr. Johnston can speak in greater detail to that.
The stronger the forms of identification of individuals you have, the greater you run the risk of huge problems if those identities then are stolen. If my driver's licence is stolen now, I can still get another one; I can prove who I am at the bank, and this may not affect my passport, for example. But as you go to stronger forms of identity, and your identity is taken over by somebody else, you may have a real problem in proving you are who you are.