Sure.
I'll really emphasize here that you'll hear Chinese companies—and we even see this with companies like TikTok, which are technically based in Singapore—assuring you that they don't want to turn over Canadians' information, that they don't want to violate people's privacy, that they want to work with you on these things. Frankly, a lot of the time they're telling the truth. These are guys who are capitalists, and they want to make money. However, what they won't tell you is that they don't have a choice in the matter. If they are operating out of China, if they are a Chinese company or if they have connections to China even if they're officially based internationally, if they are asked for personal information, they will provide it. If they are told in a dispute, in a war or anything like that to trigger problems with their technology across the world to attack infrastructure, they will have to do it.
All of these things are major national security concerns. I think that Canada and the west have long benefited from free markets, and that has been a very helpful thing to the world. However, we can't do that at the expense of national security. There needs to be a much clearer-eyed view of what's going on here.