Thank you, Dr. Morin.
I only have limited time, so I want to drill down.
I wouldn't want to suggest that we were suggesting that people with a lower socio-economic status or who have lower socio-economic privileges are more susceptible, but I like what you're talking about in terms of deprivation.
If somebody has a good middle-class lifestyle and has strong family and community bonds, but then loses those things through an event such as unemployment—let's say their industry gets put out of business by a recession or by a government policy—is that not an act of deprivation that could cause somebody to become radicalized?