And in part, that's why I would urge the government...again, the Canadian government has not signed on to the migrant workers convention, which has a very interesting method of working that says, look, all governments are responsible even for undocumented migrants and their basic human rights--the basic ones. Being an undocumented person is a problem, but if we want people to become documented migrants, if we want them to join the ranks of legal migrants, then we should not punish them, we should encourage them.
So what the convention asks is that governments lay down the basic protections, but if a worker becomes documented, comes in and legally joins the ranks of workers, then they get extra ones. So things like unemployment insurance become available to those documented workers. So it's a positive approach rather than a negative one, and they will ask them to join unions and what have you so they can fight for their rights as migrant workers.
Again, I think it's unfair to focus just on the sex trade when you have these similar kinds of exploitative working conditions for migrant agricultural labourers, which is a big issue as well in Canada, for garment workers, domestic workers, which for women is huge, and for sex workers. If we address all our measures to sex workers and say everybody's trafficked who enters and therefore they get deported, they're all victims who don't want these jobs, I think you're missing the picture of all those migrant workers who want to work and who want to be protected in that work.