Thank you very much, Chair. I really appreciate it.
Cindy, thank you very much for coming here today. I was really moved, actually to tears, and I think it's absolutely disgusting to believe that I live in a country that saw our children and first nations people as throwaway people. I think that was the very first stage. Then it became a people who were ignored for far too long, and then a people who we were going to fight with in order to somehow...because we thought it was a zero-sum game. I really hope we've entered a new age where it's about working together, about really trying to build communities between different peoples.
From the bottom of my heart, I thank you for that personal sacrifice, as do, I know, a lot of people right across this country. I know that governments have tried to discourage you in every possible way: have followed you, have tailed you, and have done everything in their power to stop you from bringing forward this case. I am excited to realize that perhaps we do live in a country where the supremacy of law, the rights of people, and justice actually will ring true.
But I don't think your work is done, unfortunately, because I think this is just a very small segment of the issues going on in aboriginal and northern affairs, or in Indigenous Affairs Canada. There are the issues related to schools and the funding of schools. I've often heard the federal government say that we just don't have the expertise to understand these departments. Well, there is expertise in this country like you wouldn't believe from people who are educators. I just can't believe that.
We can get up and debate about ISIS and about governments and how we're going to accept our responsibility on the world stage, yet we don't accept our responsibility here. What do you see as future developments, even for first nations education, which is extremely underfunded and ill serves all Canadians?