I would never tell you how to do your job—and I would never want to do your job. It's an incredibly difficult one, and I have great respect for all of you who do that work.
This gets to one of Bob's points, I guess, that we actually have very little information about whether things are working or not. So to assume that things aren't working because people say they aren't working seems to be a strange way to do business or set public policy—and that's what we're doing here.
Our sense is that Bill C-9 is a response to a perceptual issue, but not an actual or real concern. So I think it would be dangerous to act simply on public perception when we don't actually know if that perception is correct.