That is a good question.
This gives me an opportunity to speak, finally; I am pleased. That's it, you won't have a choice, now you are going to have to come visit us.
That said, we were not really consulted on this, but we don't necessarily have to look at things from that angle. We aren't all playing by the same rules. In certain regions, we do not have a critical mass of francophones.
We need quality services. As we were saying earlier, for our communities to be vibrant, we have to be able to experience and appreciate the culture, and it is often the peripheral organizations that instill life into the culture. For our families to be interested in taking part in these activities, we have to offer them activities that are equal in quality to the ones offered to the majority. We have to remember that 70% of our families are exogamous. In that way, they are already a part of the majority, and they participate a lot in majority activities. They are not going to go to activities they consider less valid or less interesting.
However, funding cultural activities of equal quality is expensive. It represents a lot of work. It may come to that. Otherwise, in 15 or 20 years, we will still be discussing the situation.