Six or seven years ago, a prominent journalist wrote a book called Sorry, I don’t speak French. You wrote the book as a professional journalist to really present your vision of our country’s linguistic duality to Canadians. In those six years, during which, I assume, you have had more access to the realities of the linguistic duality, given your position as commissioner, how has that vision evolved?
In Orleans, for example, I can tell you that the only bilingual people used to be the francophones. But the situation has changed a lot. However, I do not want to distract you from the question I asked.
Thank you, Mr. Fraser.