It does, and we're talking both from experience and also from looking at its impact on our society. And we've seen symptoms over the last 20 years. If you recall, we're talking about organized crime and prime examples, because I've lived through it in the province of Quebec, innocent people, an 11-year-old kid dying in the streets of Montreal, culminated in this ongoing war. And that has affected Quebec society and then Canadians as a whole. We've reacted with pieces of legislation.
You look at the evolution of society and do the parallel with organized crime. If you look at major conglomerates doing mergers and associations and using the world as their staging ground, organized crime is doing exactly the same things.
The reason we're here--and we're pleased you're taking the time to hear our concerns--is we simply want to reinforce the legislative tools. But also keep in mind what Professor Gordon has indicated. There's the education piece, the awareness piece, and the public has to be sensitized, but most of the public are reactive and they're saying it doesn't concern my immediate family, therefore it's not a problem. We have to educate the public and we also even have to educate our own police officers who are working the streets.