Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Through you once again to the witnesses, thank you for attending.
I'll start by saying that we live in a new world, and I don't want to have an organization like CSIS or any other organization that treats the rest of the world like some.... I don't want to belong to a country that's naive or acts like a Pollyanna and expects the whole world to be like, we respect everything you do and we would never do anything.... We know that other countries are recruiting terrorists, whether they be naturalized Canadians, people who were born here, or people with dual citizenship, who are now embedded in our country and want to do irreparable harm not only to individuals in Canada but to our very foundation. The very building we're in is the place where we exercise our democracy.
At least on five or six occasions all the questions asked in many different ways here all come down to what Mr. Guimont said. This is not an earth-shattering, new, ominous, tremendous load on CSIS. This is just a simple clarification of existing rules and regulations that a court said we needed to clarify.
Mr. Guimont, you can tell me if I'm making this as simple as possible for my constituents, who don't want to belong to a country that's naive and believes that if we're nice to everybody else they'll be nice to us? This legislation tries to impart to CSIS the same kind of judicial acceptance or protection for human resources, in other words, for informants, who want to give CSIS information in a way that won't identify them. It gives them the same type of protection that police already have with informants. Is that correct?