Well, second only to yours.
There isn't a conflict on the face of the globe that doesn't have groups of people living in my riding. If you want to go to Sri Lanka, I have both sides of that conflict. If you want to go to Afghanistan, Iraq, or Sudan, again, I have all sides of the conflicts, etc.
It would be naive of me to assume that fundraising doesn't occur in my riding. It would also be naive of me to assume that the lawyers in particular, from a variety of ethnic groups, aren't implicitly or complicitly involved in “suspicious transactions”, shall we say, where things would be of interest to various law enforcement agencies.
What I'm having difficulty understanding is how the average lawyer in Scarborough in a small practice, in a one- or two-person practice—we're not talking McCarthy Tétrault here, where lawyers really do know their clients—is possibly going to comply with this legislation. A lot of these folks just walk in off the street. They're buying a house--but the proceeds are just being parked for the purposes of funding something else at some other date.
How does this proposed legislation make a whit's worth of difference to that kind of transaction?