Thank you.
It's an extremely difficult question, and that's why, in our proposal, Cardus argues for change in the charitable tax credit. But along with that is a whole new debate about what it is to give and care for your neighbour, because the tax credit is really an interim measure to solve a problem that right now we seem to not know how to solve. So there are all kinds of connections, and Don made some of them. What's the relationship between charitable giving and the state of religion in the country? What's the relationship between mobility and charitable giving? There are so many questions in those areas that we have not tackled. We have not said this is a great Canadian debate.
If there is anything I would respectfully challenge you and your position of leadership in this country on, it would be to use your position of having a voice to make this a much bigger issue. At some point, we will make the connection between the state of charitable giving in this country and the strength of our economy. We're not there yet. We're not making those links, but at some point we will make those links, and all of a sudden this will become an issue we want to talk about.
Why don't we kick that into gear before the numbers start making those links all on their own? When you look at the demographics, all of a sudden the state of the family becomes an economic issue. We need more children to be able to create economic productivity and growth, and so on. The same thing is going to happen in the charitable sector. At some point, it's going to be an economic conversation. It's not going to be a conversation about how good you feel about your neighbour. We need to hit the conversation, and you, I respectively suggest, can take the leadership, because you have a platform that nobody else has to do that.