I would say that it's important to show, not tell. You need privacy and data protection laws that show Canadians you take privacy and data protection seriously. This means that government conduct must be covered by robust and updated legislation. It also means that political parties, which are often very eager to call out the privacy harms perpetuated by private social media companies, must be covered by Canadian privacy legislation as well.
A lot of young people who would be listening to these thrilling discussions about privacy and data protection in Canada—data harvesting, illicit interference and all of that stuff—would probably come back at you with very different values because they're the ones who actually use these services. A lot of the demographic of lawmakers and members of the executive are the folks who are specifically not using them.
I think it's really hard to build credibility with young people that these issues—and surveillance capitalism in particular—are being taken seriously unless you make these laws applicable to government conduct and the conduct of political parties.