I am going to start from a little farther.
There are some political experiences in the world that sometimes teach us things. When we were writing our submission, one of the things we had in mind was a great politician, Nelson Mandela, who taught us that reconciliation has a price. The price is truth. Only when the truth has been determined can there be reconciliation.
What we think is that our institutions, our laws and our peoples, in Canada, must never forget what can be called one of the great Canadian financial scandals of the 20th century. Billions of dollars in premiums paid into the employment insurance scheme have been siphoned off. The Consolidated Revenue Fund has a debt of $54.1 billion that it owes to the Employment Insurance Account. That has to be included in the Act. We have to continue to carry that figure on the books for as long as it has not been paid back.