Yes. It's even more than a two-tiered system.
First of all, it distinguishes disabled from non-disabled. As I said before, this whole argument is over 400 years old, to control people. It is a two-tiered system.
The other part of that is a result of the Supreme Court decisions in Hilewitz v. Canada and De Jong v. Canada. Even if people can afford to pay, does that really help? It does help individual families of those who get those minister's permits, but at the end of the day, that's not what we're about. What about people who want to come here to join families, part of family reunification, and they can't afford those costs? That's an issue.
I know of families who come here, may have a child, and they're waiting for their citizenship. If that child is born with an impairment, they risk being deported. People who come here.... If you're working and you get injured here, and you're just shy of your citizenship, you can be deported.
Absolutely, to me, it's more than a two-tiered system.