Thanks, Mr. Chair.
Thank you very much to all of the witnesses for coming today and sharing your perspectives, your experiences and your advice to the committee.
I'm very interested, Ms. Sangha, in the idea of education over enforcement and having conversations in the public square.
You referenced the clearance rate for police forces and online hate crimes. My colleague, Mr. MacKenzie, served as a police chief, and reminded me that they clear 100% of the drunk-driving cases that get put in front of them. We could run a R.I.D.E. program every day, and, unfortunately, we're still going to be catching impaired drivers.
I very much like the idea of education. When we had witnesses here a few weeks ago, I asked a few of them questions about having the conversation in the public square, and bringing groups together, so we're not dealing with this in silos within communities. We all share a common purpose in this, and that is to end hate. When hate migrates online, it seems to proliferate more quickly, but if we address it right at the root cause....
Do you have any examples of where this has been done—where different faith or ethnic groups have been brought together on a large scale, with some result, or perhaps your colleague does?