Look, it's a chicken and the egg argument, and obviously we differ 100% in terms of the approach. We have some very, very serious problems that are endemic to our society, and the only way we're going to break that cycle is by starting with children and youth and working on the prevention aspect. That requires investment. It's going to pay dividends in the long term by reducing substantially our non-discretionary expenditures.
If you look at the prison system alone, it takes somewhere between $60,000 and $80,000 a year to incarcerate a person. How does that compare with an average salary that somebody's earning in Canada?