Yes. I'm saying there are multiple digital identity systems in Canada. Think of them as intersecting Venn diagrams. There are these multiple circles. One is called a bank account, one is called a credit card, and one is called a health card, and they intersect. When you add them up and look at the part in the middle where they all meet, I suggest and propose to you that there are zero Canadians with zero digital identity.
First off, you can't get health care in this country without a health care card. I know, because I have actually been to my doctor's, but I forgot my card and I was sent home. I have arthritis, so I go to a doctor fairly frequently, and I was refused health care. Now, it was no big deal. I went home, got the card, and went back. But I believe that you cannot get health care without your health care card, every last one of us.
Aboriginal identity cards; I didn't even mention that, by the way. A new aboriginal identity card is being rolled out for 800,000 aboriginals. Ninety-six per cent of Canadians have bank accounts. I can go on and on. I've only scratched the surface of institutions that issue identity cards.
Every university issues a photo ID faculty card. I've been in many government buildings—I've lived here all my life—and for every government building, including Elections Canada in Hull, by the way, you cannot get into the building without a government photo identity card. Every employee of the Government of Canada has a photo ID card. That applies provincially, municipally, and so on. It just goes on and on.
There are dozens of digital identity cards, so anybody can get an identity card if they choose to.