Great. Thank you very much.
Mr. Reinhardt, you heard what I had to say in my preamble. I wasn't meaning any disrespect to anybody, but as I watched you over there, I'm sure you and Mr. Preuss must have been shocked to hear somebody call you liars. They weren't referring to you as individuals, but as officials crafting a piece of legislation that, in the view of at least some people in the field, is essentially—and, again, I hope I don't misinterpret this—going to devolve the authority everybody expects you to discharge for Canadian safety and security; and, secondly, that you really don't have a handle on, or don't want to enforce, your regulations. It doesn't matter how much you don't want to develop or apply them, they are yours. What I mean by that is, yours as a government—and ours collectively.
I thought you were shocked, and I didn't think you were feigning shock. Are we wrong to move ourselves back a step and say, hold on, should this legislation go through?