Thank you for that.
I think it's worth pausing a bit more on something I said in my opening, which is that sometimes the intelligence is wrong. In whatever form you're looking at it, there is something that you are.... Whether it's because you're talking it through with others, you're looking at it in a different context or you're comparing it with other things, because of your own knowledge or because of somebody else's knowledge in the room, you know it to be wrong, yet you still look at it because it paints a broader picture. You still leave it in there, because it's even useful to know that information's being spread out there or being stated somewhere for some reason.
If that is taken completely out of context, no one has the opportunity to put it into that wider context to know what is true and what isn't true.
Also, some of it you need to take time with to be able to figure out its veracity. That is why we have people who specialize in analyzing this information and who get to know whether it's from a region or a community, and whether it's domestic or foreign. Where they're looking at it and able to become an expert in it over time—or come into the job being an expert—they're giving us that best advice that, unfortunately, Canadians aren't able to get in the way that some of this has been coming out of late. I'm really hoping that through the good work of NSICOP and NSIRA, and potentially other things, the special rapporteur will give us advice so that Canadians will be able to get a better sense of the picture.