Yes, I totally agree with what you're saying.
The question for Canada is, do you want to truly include indigenous people in everything we do in this country, and are you prepared to make the necessary investments?
We've had how many years—150 years or more—of a failure to make the necessary investments. It flies in the face of any common sense. It's human beings—and that's what we are. We were never viewed that way, but we are human beings. It's human beings who create almost everything in our country, so give indigenous people a chance now to demonstrate that they can bring positive solutions to the table. We are already working with many non-indigenous organizations in this city, with some of our business leaders like Mark Chipman, the owner of the Winnipeg Jets.
Relationships are the essence of our society, and if you can't have positive relations between the different groups that make up our society, then what do you get? You get conflict.
Nobody has the answers for everything we do, but collectively, yes, we do. Just in Winnipeg, from the partnerships that we're developing with non-indigenous Canadians in many different places, with new Canadians, with refugees and through the Winnipeg partnership agreement, we know now that it's paying dividends, and it will pay even more dividends. Better outcomes will mean much less cost to our country as a whole.