Fair enough. Thanks. I just wanted to clarify that a bit.
Now, this might be a little bit of a hypothetical scenario, but we've talked a bit about the federal corrections policy to have zero drugs within the correctional system in Canada. I’m just wondering, from your perspective, how difficult is treatment when we have that constant temptation, opportunity, threats, coercion, the sorts of things that come along with day-to-day availability and access to drugs in a correctional centre? In other words, how successful or positive do you think programming and addictions counselling would be if we were to have zero access to drugs, if there were no way they could get them?
And I understand this is hypothetical and an absolute perfect-case scenario, but in comparison to what we have now, where drugs are available all the time and they're accessible—and there's that temptation and threat and coercion that people fall into—if you were to compare zero access for somebody, how much more successful do you think the programs would be? Could you put some kind of variable to that?