I have a couple of things.
I didn't actually say that the age 13 to 17 was an overstep. I said it was a strategic retreat in the face of the threat of a charter challenge. I think it was a strategic retreat. I'd leave that wording in there, please.
I think the tobacco example or allegory is a good one. Tobacco is not a lethal product for everybody. Of the people who smoke a pack a day of tobacco, 80% will have a shortened lifespan, but 20% will live as long as anybody else. This doesn't mean it's a good product. All these things, everything we do, are about the gradient of risk and amount of dosage.
This brings me to the question you had, Marilyn, about how you define healthy versus unhealthy. There is an emerging evidence base about this. One of the things Health Canada has put forward is 15% of daily value, which Ron Lund is in support of, versus 5%. One thing I want to bring your attention to is that the 15% daily value is based on a 2,000-calorie-per-day diet that an adult would have. Erica would eat double that when she's training. But for a child, that same volume would probably be 20% or 30% of what they eat. So this 15% threshold for children is grossly inadequate. There's an evidence base for that.