Thank you, Mr. Opitz.
There's a lot. The biggest threat is the one we've defined as our point of departure. That, of course, is the fact that the rate of change that is continually accelerating, which affects us in every possible dimension of national activity, is far outpacing the capacity of our institutions to adapt to that change.
Consequently we have a growing delta between the capacity, for example, of law enforcement to deal with new criminal activities; our capacity to acquire information that is critical to us, particularly with respect to considerations associated with this file; and the list goes on rather endlessly.
What we believe is absolutely essential to the security of the Dominion is very simply that we need to be proactive and start leaping forward in time, as opposed to relying on traditional institutional measures, which very clearly are failing.
Specifically with respect to this file—I don't want to diverge from the committee's interest because this is a very long answer—the system cannot be adequate when there is a guesstimate that there are between 200,000 and 500,000 undocumented individuals currently living in this country.
Taking into account what we call the 1% rule—that 1% of them could present a significant threat to this country, again, within the context again of this file alone—that represents a significant national threat, and a potential threat in both criminal and terrorist activities.