Perfect, that's excellent.
Mr. Amicelle, since you are on a roll, I'll seize the opportunity.
I would like to bring you to another area. At a previous meeting, one of our witnesses, Haras Rafiq, gave a very interesting presentation on radicalization. He stressed the fact that, to dry up the funding and support of terrorist organizations, we would have to work hard to understand how people become radicalized and why. I asked him about the current problem with funding for basic research, more specifically the funding for human research based on an article in The Globe and Mail about a research group focusing on terrorism, security and society, whose federal funding was eliminated.
I assume you also face funding problems in your work. We know that the Quebec university network complains of lack of support. We will not talk about the relationships with the provincial government, but the federal level has a responsibility in that sense. Do you think, like Mr. Rafiq, that allocating funding for groups that will be able to report on various aspects of the radicalization trend would make a significant contribution to countering terrorist financing and support in other ways?