Thank you very much.
I appreciate your being here, and the amount of research and work that Simon Fraser has done over the years on all these issues, such as cybersecurity, and the list goes on and on. I know you bring a great wealth of information.
I want to touch on a couple of things. You mentioned two things. Number one was making the case for additional powers and ensuring that oversight systems are in place.
I think the world has changed. We've seen the bombings in France and we're looking at what Putin is doing right now, and of course we can't forget about North Korea. It's very fluid. Things change from one day to the next. I hear about the length of time—whether it's an inquiry that's 20 years or all of these things—it takes to respond in a fashion that will really address these threats, and this is just one of the many threats, because we haven't even gotten into the cybersecurity piece of it. You have to be nimble in how you respond. We have never faced this before. It would seem to me that trying to make the case to the general public and to Parliament, and to all the rest of it, is going to take some time. You're not nimble, you're not fluid, and you're not addressing the issue in a timely fashion.
What would you say about that aspect of it?