Yes. I think that from an outside perspective, we can look anywhere in the country and try to examine what's going on on reserves. I watched several years ago with Attawapiskat.... From my vantage point in Vancouver, what I see is mediated by the news, politics, and partisanship, and the hot potato that it became. It wasn't just one example of one place in the country where something awful was happening; it was an extreme example of something that's pandemic in the country on reserves.
It would be great for me to weigh in and give my opinion about it, but I don't really know anything. I can share thoughts, but the people who know what's going on are the people who live there, the people who are trying to engage in solutions. They are the ones we need to listen to because, frankly, we are not experts. Even if we study and we're historians or political scientists, we are so far removed that we don't really have as much legitimacy as the people on the ground.