Yes. Let me just raise two quick points.
We often call organized crime a cancer. Well, how do you fight cancer? You fight cancer with cancer specialists. You train doctors, you set up special institutions, and then you make sure there's cooperation so there's not just one doctor in one area who discovers something and it's not shared. Those are the basic things we have to do. You need specialized strike forces; you need specialized prosecutors; you need specialized courts if necessary. You maybe then have to bring in other outside experts like we were talking about, Revenue Canada. That's the way you fight cancer. You don't conquer cancer; it's always going to come back. People are still going to get sick, but you dedicate the resources, you stop the unnecessary in-fighting, and you develop the expertise.
The second thing is that it is about education and about public image, the question we were all talking about here. If we had this meeting 10 years ago, 15 years ago, when Mom Boucher and the Hells Angels were treated as rock stars and heroes in Quebec, it would have been quite different. I have travelled around the world; that is still the case. You go to California.... When I go to the United States and Europe, the Hells Angels and other organized crime are often still seen has heroes. It's no longer the case in Canada, in part because of the work we've done as investigative journalists, in part because of laws, and in part because these guys are so stupid and nasty that they've turned public opinion against themselves. But we've made progress in Canada in the sense that at least our bikers are no longer seen as the heroes but are seen as the gangsters they are. That's not the case in other countries, so we have to work on that and make progress.