If you had let me finish my thought, Chair, I would have said that yes, there have been a lot of points made by a lot of our colleagues today and, as I was saying, for fear of repeating myself—not just myself but members all across this table—to consolidate the arguments that have been made today with respect to this privilege motion, I'm sure that you can check Hansard records to see what those arguments are.
I'm now afraid to repeat myself because I'll get called out on it. I'm not trying to repeat myself. I'm trying to help our committee members understand why this privilege motion is a process to jam this committee, to jam the House of Commons, not for reasonable purposes but for nefarious purposes.
If it were a reasonable argument—