First of all, Mr. Masse, I will try to speak more slowly—and also for the interpreters. You remind me that I want to thank them because I tend to speak quickly. I'm not the only one, I guess, around here.
There are two things.
The first thing you were asking.... Listen, from the committee's perspective, I hope you appreciate that this was meant to be helpful. We thought that, if I came here and we talked for half an hour about, for example, recognizing that privacy is a fundamental right and we were already going to do that, it wouldn't really make sense. My thing was to be helpful.
I'm happy to put my remarks on the record. I was consulting, at the same time, with the officials on how quickly we can draft these amendments because in my testimony, hopefully, you get a sense of where we're going. I will do as much as I can with the officials to provide you with as much information as I can—even if it's not the full legal text of it—while respecting the procedure, and if the chair would allow for that. I am happy to give the speech, but I think the full amendments.... The intention was that they would come when you do clause-by-clause. People who come to testify should listen to me because, obviously, if they are going to testify on things we are already fixing, that would be helpful.