Thank you all so much for being here today.
This panel is really critical, I think, as a diversity of voices, certainly in talking about how we tackle this in different ways.
Morgane, the fact that you were successful and referencing the case, I think, is important. Talking about what you're putting online for women is important, as well as the services you provide in Edmonton.
I thank you all for the work that you're doing. It's incredibly important. As the only woman politician currently sitting at the table, I certainly have experienced this. I've had my children threatened. I know what that feels like, and I know how that feels in your home.
First of all, you're all courageous—and Morgane, certainly you for being here and sharing your very personal story. I thank you for that because it's going to take the courage of people to stand up and fight this together, to battle it by exposing themselves more than they already have. I thank you for that. Your efforts are incredibly important on behalf of all Canadians, so I thank you for that today.
It really is shocking when you think about what you pointed out: that things are allowed online that are not allowed in print. If something was handed to us, we could challenge that. We have a way to do that. We know where to go. However, when it's online, things just seem to get lost. People attempt to report, and the reporting system is certainly something that we could study entirely on its own.
Ricki, you highlighted newcomers and immigrants who are nervous to report, LGBTQ people who are nervous to report and women who are nervous to report because then it puts the spotlight on them. We see the horror stories of what happens when people put themselves out there.
Morgane, you highlighted what your family has been through, which is unacceptable in our country.
First of all, I want to congratulate you on receiving the meritorious service medal in 2018 for your service to Canada on the matter of LGBTQ2+ rights. Thank you for that and, specifically, your transgender human rights work for sure.
I want to ask you all two questions—a little more about why you feel that the online publications are more harmful than the physical. What is the difference between the harms that people are experiencing online versus something that they would see in a publication? Second, how do you feel that limiting online hatred would help your work? I can imagine the work that you would all be able to do if you didn't have to focus so much of your efforts on combatting online hate.
Maybe I'll open it with Morgane because I started with her, and then we'll work down the panel.