It's a point of privilege, actually.
I think that as things get rambunctious this evening, and they will, we will all rise to that challenge. You've done a good job, Madam Chair, of putting into perspective that when we start exchanging allegations about treading on equality rights and things such as that we are crossing over a certain boundary. I would like us all to stay within a certain boundary.
In other words, for those of us who take equality rights really seriously—in my own case, having set up a foundation that made that the centre, the Canadian Constitution Foundation—and I'm surrounded by colleagues on both sides who take those things really seriously, those rights aren't to be trivialized. If we make allegations that may in some minds seem wild or specious or groundless, that trivializes the whole notion of equality. I don't think anybody wants to do that.