Very well.
I now refer you to the report of the International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group. I've received some testimonials from young Canadians, Montrealers and Quebeckers of Arab or Islam extraction who said they had received calls from CSIS making appointments to meet in cafés, asking them to work for the service as infiltration agents. These are young CEGEP and university students. And when they don't want to do so, there are reprisals.
I'm going to cite you some examples. A young Palestinian Canadian was visited by two CSIS officers at his home. They took him to a café and questioned him; they didn't have a warrant. They asked him to come without a lawyer and said they had information about his family that could cause problems in his country of origin, that they might use it if he didn't cooperate. Two days later, he was on the no-fly list. Does that tell you something? Is that part of CSIS's practices?