Right now there's a myth that we have the right to information, but until we firmly establish under charter subsection 2(b)—which is freedom of expression—that we have a right to access freedom of information, we're at a loss.
I don't care what the courts say about a quasi-constitutional thing. Until it's put in there as an amendment to the act that we have the constitutional right, we don't have that right. It's a privilege, and it's taken advantage of by government people.
That's part of the problem with the culture of secrecy. Everybody likes to say on both sides that it's broken. Well, in whose interests is it broken? It's in the vested interests of the government officials who want that secrecy and who want to continue with that secrecy.
Until the system is really reformed with less secrecy and until we have a right, it is never going to work—never.