No, I do not. But I must respond, Madam Chair, in the context of what I said earlier, which is that these are a couple of sentences taken out of context of the whole speech. I will add a few things from exactly the same speech, and this won't take me very long.
Here I quote from the speech:
Right at the outset, let me state my bias. I am in favour of a strong immigration program. As baby boomers like me prepare to sail off into retirement, our country needs more productive, competent workers. ...
[Let's] cut the red tape and expedite the processing of these future contributors to our society. Color, race, religion should continue to be irrelevant in the selection process.
...when we get them here? Here again there are some very obvious symptoms that tell us we are failing to take advantage of the potential of our immigrants. How many times have you been in a taxi driven by an engineer or seen a well qualified medical specialist acting as an orderly in a hospital? These are good, decent people who came to Canada for a better life. For a combination of reasons--partly the failure of our professional associations and partly because of failure by governments to provide the early stage support, and training required both to obtain employment and to fit into their new lives [in our country].