Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thanks to everybody for showing up today and for giving us some really good stuff. I wish I had a little bit longer, but I want to get into a couple of areas, just the small topics of health and education, and we have six minutes to do it.
Mr. Kyle, the Canadian Cancer Society does a lot of good stuff. I enjoyed your presentation. You spoke about tobacco. We have made some progress on tobacco. I spent a good chunk of my life with the Heart and Stroke Foundation as a volunteer, and health charities got it right when they came together and formed the health charities coalitions and round tables. But obesity is the new tobacco. That's what we hear, and there's a lot of truth to that.
You spoke about healthy choices and physical activity. One of the things we have to do in this process is make recommendations about how the government should go about improving the lives of Canadians. In the area of getting Canadians more active, certainly getting kids more active, but all Canadians more active, one of the big questions is, do you do it through the tax system or do you do it through direct investment in infrastructure?
We heard from the Chronic Disease Prevention Alliance yesterday along the lines of infrastructure. I think that's what you're saying here. Is that accurate?