Thank you, sir.
I think the Canadian government has been doing a relatively good job on this front, especially with the Canada centre For Community Engagement, through which a lot of engagement with communities and social service organizations is being done. We in Canada actually avoided a major pitfall of some other projects along these lines in other countries where there were top-down, government-driven, prescriptive approaches to countering extremism and to dealing with these grievances. We instead went with a more collaborative approach. The Canadian government understood who were the social service organizations—activist groups included—that were doing the work on the ground with at-risk communities. It really generated organically an ability for these participants, whether in pre-existing social service agencies and organizations or, I'll call them, “community groups” or “activist groups” to actually begin to work together and off-load some of the challenges when it came to very young people, like children, young teenagers—even adults—to be able to deal with those grievances on a one-on-one basis.
Really, the recommendation I would just [Technical difficulty—Editor] for the government in general is just to keep working together with organizations that are already there on the ground doing this work and that have been doing this work for some time. We don't need to reinvent the wheel; we just need to get on the bike and ride.