Yes, I completely agree.
First of all, I have supplied the clerk with links to the documents that I referenced, so hopefully those will be shared with you.
I do think that it's incredibly important for a leader to set a moral standard and that it's highly problematic that the company he chaired for many years was engaged in very aggressive tax avoidance, and continues to be, and is also investing in international assets that are privatizing infrastructure and not delivering services to people as was intended, as well as taking advantage of generous tax concessions that, in the case of Brazil, should be allowing more people to have access to basic sanitation, rather than lining investors' pockets from the proceeds that are partly derived from public subsidies to this industry.
I think there are serious moral questions there on the tax front and also on how profits are extracted in a private equity model that is all about short-term gains and leaves aside the question of societal impacts.
