You mentioned in your answer something else I want to hone in on. You mentioned that Canada is a high-value, low-risk environment. I agree 100% with you that it's the case. There's one aspect of that on which I'd like to get your comment. In our country, it used to be that if you were convicted of production of, importing or exporting of schedule I substances—including fentanyl, meth, cocaine and heroin—it would result in mandatory jail time.
The current government's Bill C-5 eliminated that mandatory jail time and, in effect, allowed house arrest for those convicted of moving and producing large quantities of very serious drugs, some of which are wreaking havoc on our streets today, as you mentioned. How do laws like Bill C-5 and like Bill C-75, which created a revolving door in our justice system, imposing on judges the requirement that they release those who are seeking bail and making it very difficult to take someone off the streets who's been arrested for some of these very serious offences...? When you couple those two bills alone, how do they play into Canada's being a high-value, low-risk environment for organized crime?