We talk about values of Canadians, and it's my understanding that the people who are detained, again, are not suffering cruel and unusual punishment. They're able to go about, for the most part, their daily lives. Some are fathering additional children, teaching in schools. If you look at the detention of these individuals, it's not an uncomfortable lifestyle. They always have the choice of going back to their country of origin, or to a third country, so, really, the choice comes down to the detainee. I would imagine that if you ask a lot of Canadian citizens, natural-born Canadian citizens, if they could trade places with some of these non-Canadian citizens and their lifestyle, they would put their hands up in a hurry.
It takes away from my feeling about my fellow citizens to believe that anybody would be incarcerated against their will and with lack of evidence, but this is not incarceration that we're talking about; this is just about the ability to remain in Canada.
I'm here to remind you of what happens when we make a mistake.