I'll speak to the panellists first and then get into some closing comments.
I want to encourage you. You had promised, especially Mr. Ryland, about giving us a lot of the documents that you didn't.... Various commenters didn't have all the information that we were asking for. I would implore you to provide the information we requested to the clerk next to me so we can get a comprehensive answer for the committee. We'll provide it to all the delegates here.
Something that's really going to stick with me is a comment by Roger McNamee about the term "voodoo dolls”.
I watch my kids. I have four children. One is 21, one is 19, one is 17 and one is 15. I watch them becoming more and more addicted to these phones. I see work done by our colleagues in London about the addictive capabilities of these online devices. I wondered where are they going with this. You see that the whole drive from surveillance capitalism, the whole business model, is to keep them glued to that phone, despite the bad health it brings to those children, to our kids. It's all for a buck. We're responsible for doing something about that. We care about our kids, and we don't want to see them turned into voodoo dolls controlled by the almighty dollar and capitalism.
Since we like the devices so much, I think we still have some work to do to make sure we still provide access. We like technology and we've said that before. Technology is not the problem; it's the vehicle. We have to do something about what's causing these addictive practices.
I'll say thanks and offer some last comments.
Thanks to our clerk. We'll give him a round of applause for pulling it off.
He has that look on his face because events like this don't come off without their little issues. We deal with them on a real-time basis, so it's challenging. Again, I want to say a special thanks to Mike for getting it done.
Thanks also to my staff—over to my left, Kera, Cindy, Micah, Kaitlyn—for helping with the backroom stuff too. They're going to be very much de-stressing after this.
I'll give one shout-out before we finally close—oh, I forgot the analysts. Sorry. I'm always forgetting our poor analysts. Please stand.
Thank you for everything.
Thanks to the interpreters as well. There were three languages at the back, so thank you for being with us the whole week.
I'll give a little shout-out to our friend Christopher Wylie, despite being upstaged by sandwiches. I don't know if somebody saw the tweets from Christopher Wylie: “Democracy aside, Zuckerberg also missed out on some serious sandwich action.” He suggested that I mail the leftovers to Facebook HQ. Maybe that's the way we get the summons delivered into the right hands.
I want to thank all the media for giving this the attention we think it deserves. This is our future and our kids' future.
Again, thanks to all the panellists who flew across the globe, especially our U.K. members, who are our brothers and sisters across the water.
Singapore is still here as well. Thank you for coming.
Have a great day.
We'll see you in Ireland in November.
The meeting is adjourned.