I think it's exactly the situation of dual citizens and naturalized citizens who are going to be facing two-tiered citizenship.
It's fine to say of course we want citizens—those who are applying to be citizens—to reside in Canada, but it's not fair to treat them differently than Canadian citizens who are born here. The fact is that for a Canadian citizen who decides to get married overseas, raise a family overseas, and maybe come back to retire, it's not a problem. We don't take that citizenship away. But in the case of a naturalized citizen, we're now saying that, if you decide you're not going to reside here all the time, and we will.... I mean it's just a paper application that the minister's representative can make saying that you didn't intend to reside; you misrepresented your intention when you obtained Canadian citizenship.
In people's lives situations change. Job offers appear overseas. Why should we treat a naturalized citizen differently with regard to their ability to take up a job offer overseas than we do Canadians who are born here?
The same is a problem with revocation of citizenship. This is punishment. Very clearly it is punishment. We have ways of punishing people. We don't do banishment anymore, although one of our founding fathers was banished for treason by Queen Victoria.