I certainly hope that isn't the case. That's how we got into this mess in the first place.
My understanding is that the minister is going to seek advice from people who actually have the technical expertise. There are those people in Canada. Many of them work for companies that manufacture and design these; they're engineers. I know the RCMP will obviously continue to be consulted on all of these things. I don't foresee any change there, but certainly politicians will not be sitting around discussing whether or not a single-shot bolt action .22 is supposed to be restricted or not.
It's only very few firearms that come in where their classifications are not obvious, and if they're not obvious, then maybe we ought to refer them to experts who can understand the technicalities of them. The RCMP has a long and illustrious track record of making wrong classifications and then reversing them. We've seen just a few of them in the last couple of years, where firearms that were deemed to be non-restricted and then purchased by tens of thousands of people in Canada as non-restrictive firearms are now being called prohibited. Well, that's their mistake, not the person's mistake who bought it.