As you know, it's a huge bill. Making that omnibus statement in response to that bill.... I could pick up on a couple of examples.
For example, the advocating terrorism provision, which was put into the Criminal Code, is either unconstitutional or unnecessary, in my mind. That is to say, we already had hate speech provisions and facilitating groups provisions. We already had counselling offences, which could include counselling terrorist offences, etc.
To the extent that it adds something to the code, it would be terribly broad, which to my mind would make it unconstitutional. There certainly are provisions that were added where, I think, the powers were already there. It's more about starting to use them in ways they haven't been used. This gets you back to your intelligence versus evidence problem—we have very few criminals prosecuted, particularly in terrorist financing, but also in all other areas of terrorism. Part of the problem, apparently, is how to get the evidence to actually do the prosecutions, rather than enact new powers to prosecute.