Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I wasn't going to take a question, but there was something Mr. Macdonald said that I couldn't help but take note of. I was looking at his organization's website, and it's very interesting: his organization has gone from two to twenty full-time staff--quite a success story. I was wondering, first of all, if the staff and your organization actually write your Wikipedia webpage, because on the Wikipedia web page, specifically, it says: “The Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives is an independent, non-partisan policy research institute in Canada that leans to the political left.” You mentioned you're progressive, and I was just curious, because obviously most people write their own Wikipedia website, so I would imagine that's what it says and that's the situation. I was just kind of curious if you have any comments on that.
As well, you talk about things in here. I know alternative policy is interesting, but you talk about pushing to privatize health care--which quite frankly scares me--and indeed that the aging population won't cripple health care, and we've heard evidence that we believe it will; many of the witnesses have as well. You say further on—or at least Mr. Campbell, the executive director, says—“The alternative federal budget is a 'what if' exercise”, which I think is great, but “...what a government could do if it were truly committed to an economic, social, and environmental agenda that reflects the values of the large majority of Canadians—as opposed to the interests of a privileged minority”.