I want to thank our witnesses today.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Amble, you have touched on the sensitive nerve we call our immigration policy, and in a way you have touched on everything that is magnificent about Canada and everything we would like to preserve.
Here we sit on a committee where we're proud of a Canada that is blind to colour and religion in how we administer our laws and immigration policies. One of the proudest things we can say is that if you ask a ten-year-old in one of our schools, they probably wouldn't be able to tell you too much about whether they like a person of one category or another. I think the younger you get in our country the more wonderful is the tolerance that you see.
By your studies you have exposed yourself to the question that some would call racial profiling. My question is, given what you do for a living, how do you manage to objectively pursue what you're doing and yet avoid the allegation that you're doing racial profiling in some of your studies?