I have just a couple of questions.
Mr. Rafiq, I'm reminded of the Oklahoma City bombings that were mentioned earlier and the radicalized Christian ideology that was used to justify some of the attacks on innocent people. There's a commonality and a line between some of the things we're talking about here: the extremism of groups and the use of religion broadly to justify terrorist activities. I'm also thinking back. I worked in Sierra Leone for a while on the recruitment of very young people into incredibly violent acts—eight-, nine-, and ten-year-olds. There was no Islamization over that. It was a grab for power, and the sale of diamonds into the North American market enabled it. It was no different from the sale of oil now by ISIS.
So there are these commonalities and trends. We've seen some of this movie before, perhaps not on YouTube and not with the extremism that ISIS propagates and uses to drag various groups into their conflict, but there's a pattern. Organized crime recruits young gang members from suburban Toronto where I grew up—eight-, nine-, and ten-year-olds—and radicalizes them. We didn't call it radicalization, though, did we?