I think it's fair to say that perceptions about the effectiveness and efficiency of the criminal justice system are formed by a variety of factors, starting with one's general underlying trust of one's neighbour; second, the kind of perception formed from local coverage of what's going on in local communities—and crime is measured nationally in many ways but is experienced locally—and then by other potentially high-profile instances, such as the extent to which there has been recent coverage of a wrongful conviction or something, although it may be one case out of 400,000. All of those would be factors that we know, just from research, affect Canadians' perceptions.
So again—