I think it's a complete failure in leadership.
I just came back from Ivey business school, where I teach every year. People are deeply involved in this issue. They see it as an assault on them.
In the States, Vioxx, which killed 50,000 to 60,000 people, was taken off the market because of Dr. Graham's disclosure. In Canada, we had the blood scandal in the 1980s. Some 60,000 people—that was the number, but perhaps there were many more—died of hepatitis C and AIDS, because the government failed to screen the blood when it could have. People went to jail in France and other countries. Here, virtually nothing happened, even though we had a public inquiry.
We really need to start engaging the public. Frankly, the governments until now have not been pushed enough. We need a media that's more engaged. We need parliamentarians who are engaged. We need a bureaucracy that's engaged, and we need to light a fire in the public to demand it.