What's happening is that over time the number of working individuals to support one senior is reducing, so as we have more seniors coming from our baby boomers, and now we add more to that, it puts more of a burden on someone like myself, who is now trying to work to get set for my own retirement. I'm now paying into someone else's retirement—well, not retirement because they wouldn't have worked—paying into supporting someone who hasn't even helped with my education. We're all aware that our education system.... For university it's subsidized about 50% or something like that. I don't mind paying for someone who has helped me to acquire the skills I have now, to work and help to build the system, but I would have a problem supporting someone who has never helped me in that sense. It comes back to the issue of fairness.
On October 25th, 2016. See this statement in context.