Thank you very much.
Ms. Vonn, I would come back to a similar line of questioning that I had before.
I'm trying to understand the importance of having good privacy protections for public policy. It seems to me that it wasn't that long ago that we had a debate in Canada around whether or not we should have a gun registry. Critics of that policy at that time were very articulate about concerns over government having certain kinds of information and what it would mean if that were shared or if the government changed its policies and had that information on people.
Do you not think that the people who were critics of the gun registry should be the first to stand up for very strict rules around information sharing within government, because they understood so well what the risk to ordinary Canadians might be if government had lots of information and was able to share it without discrimination?
