I'm sorry, I'm a resident of NDG. That's Notre-Dame-de-GrĂ¢ce, which is a suburb of Montreal and a very anglophone area of Montreal.
My father was born here in Montreal of Irish parents, and my mother was of German parentage, which was interesting during the wars when they found people throwing rocks at their house and calling them Krauts. There was a lot of discrimination that didn't result in being in a camp. Nonetheless, people had differences, but that's not why I'm here.
I have four items I wanted to mention. You were saying today during the meeting about having examples of what's going to be a problem, so I have four things.
First of all, in Montreal, we have a federal project to put a light show on the Jacques Cartier Bridge for $40 million to celebrate Montreal's anniversary. I'm quite opposed to that, but I'm worried about my opposition, because it doesn't seem to have an effect anywhere. I keep mentioning it and nothing happens. Anyway, that's just something that could become an issue. I might just lie in front of the bulldozers to stop the project. Then what happens? Am I a terrorist?
It moves on to more serious things. I would like that $40 million to go Chez Doris, which is the women's shelter that really needs support.