Thank you, Mr. Chong.
Looking at the questions then, and the reasons.... We're trying to find out why a political decision was made, and the example my colleague mentioned was Jedi Knights. A week ago, we had Dimitri Soudas, who is not known as a statistician, trashing the work of Statistics Canada and claiming that 21,000 members of the Jedi Knights were in the survey.
Mr. Boyko, when you look at survey data and see a spike like that for the Jedi Knights, is that not common--there are certain areas where people might provide misinformation? Are you still able to use the data? Is Statistics Canada's credibility damaged because 21,000 people said that they were Jedis as opposed to Druids?