That's a great point, Mr. Lammam. I'm sorry, I have to interrupt, but it's because I only have a couple of minutes.
Mr. Clemens has a quote from his study and I'm going to read it: “...in a comparison of income of the same group of people over time, income inequality declined significantly.”
Sorry, that's your study, Mr. Lammam, and I'd like to read that quote out so that we can perhaps make sure it gets into the report.
As Mr. Clemens was talking, as you're talking, Mr. Lammam, I'm hearing my life story play out in front of me. I was a single parent in high school, never finished grade 12, had to go on social assistance, finally went into university, got a policing job, had to use child care, but couldn't rely on day care during the day because I worked shift work—which is why I'm so proud of our government, which decided to give the families the money so they could choose their child care—and here I am now a member of Parliament. I happen to be, obviously, what you're talking about; you can't judge a book by its cover. And, no, we don't pick our parents, as Ms. Nash, tongue in cheek, said, but we do make life choices.
One thing I noted here today is that when you talk about the people stuck—the single parents, the drug abuse, alcohol abuse, no grade 12—in terms of the opportunity to move forward in Canada, as Ms. Carney said, there is equality of opportunity. Having said all of that, I noted that you did not say aboriginal people are stuck there, and that I found very interesting. So thank you for that.