Thank you so much, Madame Sidhu.
I want to be really clear: This is a non-partisan issue. Human rights are a non-partisan issue. All committee members supported the study. I want to be really clear about that.
I also want to be really clear that what we do as elected officials and the messages we send, as we have been cautioned by the witnesses today, can either harm or help people. I take my role as a member of Parliament very seriously. I worry about how the halls of power are being used right now in a way that can harm people.
Saying that, I want to ask you a question, Tyler Boyce. You spoke a lot about education. I was a teacher. I feel so sad about what's happening in schools, because I was a teacher. I was actually a sex ed teacher at the beginning of my career.
Why is education important?
Do you think members of Parliament should have to go through mandatory training when they are elected to understand their roles and legal obligations to uphold the charter, which includes the whole Constitution? It seems that we pick and choose when to uphold it and when not to, depending on the issue.