Well, quite frankly, we believe that the designation will be politicized. We've seen examples of that with the present government, where the preferences or the prejudices of the government of the day have a profound impact on such designations.
So ultimately, people will fall victim to the prejudices of the country of origin. One example, certainly, is the State of Israel itself, which the government has a very close relationship with and views in high regard, in spite of the overwhelming evidence that there are profound human rights issues relating to that particular state and its treatment of its own citizens who are not Jewish or certainly those who are living in the occupied territories.
So that's one example, but it's a profound one, and it shouldn't be just limited... This isn't simply about the Arab-Canadian community. This is something that we expect and suspect, based on past experience, will be propagated to other areas of the world, where there will be some special relationship between the government of the day in Canada and that country and as a result there will be political consideration in terms of that kind of a designation as to who will get that kind of a pass and who will not get that pass.