I'm glad you mentioned that, because I just happened to be watching the news last night, and when we talk about international and.... We have a United Nations group that met with a local group, I think it was today or yesterday. There appeared to be--and one has to be cautious about news reports--a reluctance by this human rights group from the United Nations to interview the police and to talk to them about what they've done before and after that experience, that community-type base, and what they're doing to alleviate.... Then they interviewed a spokesperson for the police department. And yet the United Nations group didn't talk to them about how they have it written into their policy and are vehemently against racial profiling and all those other things. From watching that news report, I think what that does to the average Canadian--if you have any influence over or any connections with the UN group--it takes any kind of report they bring back to Canada and says they didn't go to all the people to get all the answers. They just got one side of the story.
I wonder if you have any comments about that, the perception there.