I assume you're talking about security clearances and classifications. I can't speak to how the agencies are screening to let in individuals with those clearances. What I can say is that because we face this on the defence file, we take a view in this country that we want the fewest security clearances possible. We think that clearing fewer people will make us safer, meaning that fewer people having access to that kind of information and knowledge will make us a safer country, because there will be perhaps fewer leaks or things like that.
Other countries have taken a very different approach now. They're starting to declassify more and more information. We've actually seen that in real time in Ukraine, where the U.K. government's GCS is declassifying information in real time to show everyone a picture of what is going on. We're seeing that as well in the updated national security strategy coming out of the United States, where they're saying they're going to declassify more information to make the public more aware.
Whether it's screening, whether it's agencies or whether it's the contract security program in this country that does it for National Defence, the lens through which we do that needs to change. I think the idea that we need to keep people out instead of bringing people in and making them more aware needs to change.