Thank you very much.
With the indulgence of the committee, I have a couple of quick questions before our time is gone. I'll just pick up where Mr. Mulcair left off with regard to the Canadian Medical Association.
It's interesting that you have what struck me as quite a social engineering proposal, which is to tax our burgers and our high-calorie foods. That's an interesting proposal. But who is going to determine what is a healthy food and what should be taxed and what shouldn't be taxed? I have all kinds of fears of opening that Pandora's box.
Nonetheless, the issue is to try to deal with the childhood obesity crisis, and I applaud the recommendation for that attempt. But in your own studies and in your own polling, you have identified that although 26% of those aged 2 to 17 are obese or overweight, only 9% of Canadians recognize it. So it's a recognition problem prior to the social engineering problem. I would think you would have to address the information side of it before you address the penalty side.
I just don't know if you've thought that through very clearly or how you would address that.