If we were talking about only people who are involved in organized crime and senior members involved in organized crime, we might be having a different discussion. But what we know is that these laws won't only apply to those individuals. These laws will apply across the board. For those who do think about the penalties—and I would suggest that's not the average person I've seen in the prisons, whether it was when I worked with men, with young people, or, for the last fifteen years, with women—they will be the ones offered up. They'll be the ones in the front who will be getting these penalties. It certainly won't be the people who are funding much of what you and I and most people would be concerned about. If in fact that's the logic, I would suggest it's a flawed logic in terms of actually dealing with those people who are most problematic.
The more you focus on this sort of approach, the more you draw resources out of assisting the very individuals who might otherwise get drawn into that lifestyle because they have virtually no other options, whether they're in Montreal, Toronto, northern Saskatchewan, Winnipeg, or wherever we're talking about.