Thank you very much for the question.
We really admire the Canadian government's forward planning around this threat. This is an emerging threat that not only the Canadian government but also global governments need to be concerned about.
Some of our main findings around the Canadian incel movement I mentioned in my briefing, but I want to talk a bit about prevention here. Some of the main findings we have discovered in the early stages of that work are that incel communities are open to mental health interventions and behavioural health interventions. This is actually no different from other forms of violent extremism—really across the spectrum. Whether we're talking about al Qaeda and Daesh inspired violent extremism or whether we're talking about the far right or the far left, we have consistently found, across the spectrum, that these audiences are open to behavioural health interventions.
With the violent incel community, in part because we found high levels of discussions around their mental health and well-being already on platforms, there is an opening for us here to use mental health interventions as a way of starting a conversation with people who are at risk of violence.
We would really encourage the Canadian government to invest heavily, as I mentioned, in behavioural health models, in building on the existing prevention and social service provision organizations across the country, and also equipping them to be able to handle cases coming from this violent misogynistic movement as well.