Are you letting me continue?
I've realized one thing. In some francophone centres—it doesn't matter which ones—permission was given, although that caused a scandal, to provide English courses to immigrants in order to take economic necessities into account. That's understandable. However, even though they want to combat assimilation and help the community, they're giving English courses to immigrants so they can integrate further. You can see the difficulty.
For me, it's preferable for immigrants to be in highly francophone areas if we want them to integrate into the francophone community, whether it be in Quebec, New Brunswick, Acadia or in the north, or in Ontario, in the towns and villages, in order to integrate economically as well.
Francophones themselves acknowledge this situation and say they want to retain immigrants by teaching them English. The primary link with the francophone community won't develop economically in French. As for integration, we find ourselves in a paradox that further encourages assimilation. That's the situation.