It's difficult to say, because the country doesn't speak with one voice. We have a government; we have a free press; we have commentators like Doug Bland, myself, and others, who are opposed to the war, and so on. To say there ought to be a concerted message about this, or there ought to be a concerted message about that, the problem is who's going to concert the message.
I think one of the major problems we've always had in this country is that Canadians do think--as Senator Dandurand has been famously quoted in the early 1920s--that we live in a fireproof house, far from flammable materials. And they've always thought that. They thought that in the 1930s, when the situation in Europe was deteriorating, leading to the Second World War. They thought that in the 1950s and 1960s. They think it today. It's very hard to convince people, especially on this issue.
I'm really quite mystified about this. September 11 happened, and 24 Canadian were killed. They were killed incidentally. They weren't attacked as Canadians. They were in the World Trade Center. But how many thousands and thousands and thousands of jobs were lost in this country in the weeks following that because the border closed? How do you explain to Canadians that when you have this kind of integrated supply system for industry on this continent, where just-in-time delivery is the rule and not the exception, that if the border closes again as a result of a terrorist attack in the United States, we may not only see thousands of jobs being lost in the immediate aftermath, but we may see major corporations saying, “Well, if we want to access the U.S. market, can we really take a risk about setting up a plant in Canada, in case the border closes?”
That's what I meant when I said earlier that 40 cents of the dollar in every pocket of every Canadian comes from international trade, and most of it from the United States. We have a direct economic, national interest in trying to maintain some sense of global order. The problem is that because the danger is not right on our doorstep, because the Toronto 16, or whatever, have not succeeded in what they're alleged to have tried to do, we don't have, thank God, blood flowing in the streets of this country. So people don't see it as an immediate problem, but it is an immediate problem.