I would like to make a comment. I am going to back to Mr. Jacob's question and Ms. Boivin's comments.
Over the past five or seven years, we have observed a major deterioration in prostitution conditions and in the situation of women in the field. It is women who tell us this. They tell us what is going on. I am reluctant to tell you everything because it is very crude, but conditions are deteriorating to a considerable degree.
I would like to emphasize that this high degree of deterioration is due to pornography. Pornography is filmed prostitution. We are not used to viewing it that way, and yet pornography is filmed prostitution. No one reacts to the impact of that pornography. No one reacts to that pornography, but it is insidious. These are the models that are offered to our young people.
My Afeas colleagues mentioned education. In response to Mr. Jacob, I believe we must take action on this issue of pornography, which is part of the sex industry. It appeared 30 or 35 years ago with the globalization of markets. The sex industry did not exist before then, and now it has become an extremely powerful lobby. That is due to the fact that, with the globalization of markets, everything is for sale, organs, human beings, sex and so on. We must take action on this matter.