I may be shifting gears for a second, but this is great. We're just trying to get a sense. Maybe we could get some data if you guys have some estimates or statistics on what that overlap might look like, even from some moderate sample size. It might be nice to know.
With respect to internally displaced people, obviously it's a touchy subject. If there are internally displaced people due to some failure of the rule of law in a country, there's not going to be a lot of willingness from that source country to want to do some type of deal that would allow those people to come to Canada.
Has there been any experimentation or discussion around offering places like Ukraine, Colombia or Venezuela, countries that Canada has traditionally taken refugees from in the past, where we've said, “We understand that you're experiencing this trouble. We will make immigration available to your country, to many thousands of people, referred and assessed through Canadian diplomatic channels, to help relieve the pressure in your home country and encourage other countries to do the same”? Those people might come to Canada as permanent residents, but there might also be a high likelihood that, when things stabilize, they return. It might be a way to help address this much larger problem of 40 million internally displaced people worldwide.
What sort of plans might exist there?