Thank you. It's been an interesting afternoon.
Mr. Ménard related a while ago that he's talking lawyer talk and it might be difficult to understand. Well, I'm not a lawyer, and I believe you may have a hard time understanding a lot of lawyer talk.
I listened to the conversation a minute ago between you people and the chairman, Mr. Hanger, who's a police officer, and that attracted my attention more than anything. Because here we have a person who's in the profession, and we have people out there in the profession. We've had witnesses here who are in the profession of protecting people through the police force. They seem to be quite happy with the legislation the way it is; in fact, they don't want it broadened, but they want it left there so they're enabled to do a better job.
Mr. Hanger said you need lots of tools in your toolbox if you're a police officer. You're suggesting a lot of tools shouldn't be allowed in there. We get to tossing around things like that, and then I recall a comment made, I think it was by Mr. Lee, a while back, that we don't expect to have a whole bookful of codes: you can't do this, but you can do that, and you can't go here and you can't go there. When does that all end?
I believe that I represent the average Canadian on the street as well as anybody. I've been a farmer, I've been a teacher, a principal in a school. I've been involved in a lot of different things, and I'll tell you that 95% of the people out there want the police to get their job done, and that is, to protect society. They do not want any hindrance. I think most of them would agree with me in saying we trust our police with good common sense to do those things that will protect those rights that need to be protected when so needed, but the bottom line is we're going to do a better job of protecting society.
I'm sick and tired of seeing 11-year-old girls taken off a skateboard when they're going to a movie or to buy a video, and then later raped, and there could be a problem of some technicality--maybe not particularly in that case. I'm just saying that we are sick and tired of hearing comments such as when you arrest an alleged terrorist and somewhere in the background on TV somebody says something to the effect that, well, there's a possibility there could be some entrapment. What?
The police did an excellent job. They've done something that's really opened the eyes of Canadians. I'm cheering them on. The old 95% average guy, I'm saying “Good on you”. Wait a minute, did they do something wrong? Did the police do something wrong? Well, frankly, I don't give a hoot, and neither do most Canadians. They don't really care. They want the job done. And within the ranks of those people who are professionals who do the job, the authorities above them, they will take care of their own. They know the difference between good common sense, good law protection, and abuse. They know the difference. They'll look after it.
Why do we need to come up with something in the Criminal Code to say this is right and that's right, and this is wrong and that's wrong, and you people better listen to us because we know better? Well, I don't know better than the police force.
I would really like you to comment on what I had to say.