I think it's important to remember that there's an awful lot of women out there with invisible disabilities. Coming back to some of the data I've shared, this is quantitative data that needs to be deepened by properly attacking these questions from a longitudinal perspective and so on. I think that with 35% of sex workers in British Columbia and 40% of women in prisons, we're talking about women with disabilities when we're talking about any of these issues. We're not acknowledging that they're women with disabilities, perhaps, but that's what we're talking about. It's one third of indigenous women, and I have no hesitation in saying that if the data was there, then I know it would affirm what I'm saying.
You talked about the cross-border sex trafficking. I know that's happening among young indigenous women, young women with disabilities included. When we're talking about any of these issues, we need to add the disability lens and the intersectional lens at all times. The most vulnerable women in this country—