I'm sorry to interrupt you there, Senator. I don't have much time. I'm looking right at the definition now—subsection 171.1(5)—and this is for “sexually explicit material”. It says:
the dominant characteristic of which is the depiction, for a sexual purpose, of a person's genital organs or anal region or, if the person is female, her breasts;
That is very broad when it comes to what Canadians see on television, which they access without a digital ID. You're proposing to change or alter that. I think Canadians expect that when they go on to Netflix or Crave or platforms such as Amazon Prime that they're able to access these shows without a digital ID to do so.
There's an old Supreme Court decision in the United States about pornography—“I know it when I see it”. You're kind of making that position now and pointing us to this Criminal Code definition; but it is very broad, Senator, and it is going to capture so much more content than I know you don't intend to. However, this is the language of the legislation.
How can Canadians be assured that they won't be brought into this based on the wording of the legislation that I've just read—and I know you've been trying to read it to some of my other colleagues.