Well, I'm glad to hear we're all working from the same stats, which are not flawed, but not as complete as they could be. That's pretty much what I'm hearing, that those stats we got last week are what to work from.
What I'm looking at is the aspect that the average conditional “sentencee” is under supervision for something like 400 or more days, and the average imprisoned person is under supervision, in the literal term, of about 30 days. I'm rounding the figures.
Is it not better to have a bad person, who can be—of course, I want to defer to Mr. Stewart on this—rehabilitated, we hope, under some form of the eye of the public for a longer rather than a shorter time? In the imprisonment situation, getting to the victim's point of view, the offender who is incarcerated generally is out without any supervision or monitoring quicker.