I'm going to duck the first question, about why it happened, because that would require me to make a political judgment, and I'm no more qualified than anyone on the street to make that political judgment. The honest answer is that I don't know why it happened. There are probably a number of reasons.
Your second question is an important one. These are real issues. National security is an acute issue. How we grapple with it is an acute issue, both legally and operationally. One of the difficulties we have in Canada is that we're not sufficiently discursive on it; that is, the expertise in the area tends to be monopolized within government. Government tends to be close-lipped on national security issues. There is no diffusion of expertise, because we don't have a conversation, or at least up until this point we haven't had a conversation.
One of the things both Professor Roach and I said in the aftermath of Bill C-51 was that aside from whatever you think about the merits of Bill C-51, we can't have a process like this again. We need to have a more premeditated policy discussion. I think the idea of a consultation process in national security, which we've never had before, is a very valuable one.
Professor Roach and I have said that we have concerns about aspects of the green paper, and we do. We do not, however, have concerns about the existence of the green paper. We welcome the consultations that are under way across the country, which you mentioned. As private individuals trying to keep up, we welcome them, but we're finding them somewhat exhausting. That will help then encourage insight and expertise in this area and cultivate expertise outside of government.