Thank you, Professor, and I appreciate that point. That's certainly not what we are proposing, any mass incarceration.
That is precisely why this bill, Bill C-10, is narrowly targeted at those involved in gang activities and using guns to commit crimes. Not wanting to cast the net too wide, we're focusing very much on what Canadians are telling us are the most serious offences.
I've heard quite a bit of talk about this discretion of judges, but I'd like some comment from the Canadian Bar Association or others. For many of the offences we've listed, and I'll talk about some of the primary offences where it's an escalating five, seven, or ten years, what we're dealing with in the second and third cases, of seven and ten years, is someone who has used a firearm in attempted murder, discharged a firearm with intent, committed sexual or aggravated assault, and so on—what we've found to be the most serious offences—and has done it not only once but twice.
Many people feel that when there's been a recidivist activity, obviously we have to bring in safeguards and start to err on the side of protection of society. When someone has done this once, that's one thing. When they're out and have done it again, it's quite another, in the public's view.
Just so I know what we're really talking about, isn't it the case with many of these offences that there's already a four-year mandatory minimum? What Bill C-10 does, instead of making it a four-year mandatory minimum, is make it a five-year mandatory minimum. We're talking about taking discretion away from judges.
It's been presented, I know, by the opposition—in some cases very alarmingly—as that we're narrowing the discretion of judges. But what we're doing with this bill is saying that on these most serious offences, on a first offence, instead of four years, it's five. Is that not the case?