Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you for coming.
There were a lot of points made about education earlier.
Ms. Hare, you said that there are young people who attempt to self-educate with pornography because it's freely available and they can do it in private. Dr. Gahagan, you had said we need to do more in terms of properly instructing young people in safe sex practices, boundaries, these sorts of things.
One of the challenges that's found any time we try to introduce sexual health education in schools is that there are often very organized lobbies that are opposing this for various reasons. They think that it might violate the province of the parents to be the sole domain over telling their children about this. Others might have a religious objection to saying that it's okay to be nice to gay people, these sorts of things.
Do you see a role for making such education mandatory, like all other subjects, to say that you can't opt out of math, you can't opt out of history, and you can't opt out of this?