Great. We will eagerly wait for your conclusions, then.
My honourable colleague, Mr. Dion, pointed out the occasional tendency to paint somewhat of a rosy picture. Sometimes, it's important not to wear rose-coloured glasses so as not to influence the conclusions. I heard a contradiction in your comments today, and it leads me to believe that the rose-coloured glasses may, in fact, be on. In your brief, you say that “the dominance of English often reduces the space that francophones have to express themselves. But these dangers do not come from...federal institutions.” Then, five or six minutes later, you turned around and said that the anglophone culture of departments was so strong you had to remind them that they had to do more than simply tolerate French, but actually promote it.
How do you reconcile the assertion that federal institutions do not contribute to the problem in any way and your comment about the departmental anglophone culture being so strong that you had to—