Thank you.
Mr. Solomon, I want to pursue the line of questioning of my friend, Mr. Rathgeber.
The kind of model you're proposing, where all the cars go through and each one is tested...you may call it random because the test locations move from place to place, but that is certainly not random. You simply plant yourself in one place and you test everyone going through. I don't know how random that is. It's a random location, but not random testing. That's the first point.
The second point I want to make with you is that there's obviously real crime, whether it's the gangs, whether it's carnage on the roads. I am actually afraid. I came to this country in 1968. I came from Britain. Prior to that I grew up in India. I'm afraid that every year the level of fear and the intensity of fear created in the minds of Canadians is going up, in the way we express ourselves about issues. And when fear goes up, people give in very readily to the prescription of the limiting of their liberties and freedoms.
This is a much larger question. I know there's carnage on the roads. There are alternative ways of dealing with those issues. I want to put to you that it may be constitutionally valid, ultimately, for us to do what you're suggesting. I don't know whether it would be. It might be. But is it desirable to focus on that, rather than on the other alternatives that can get us to the same point?