Mr. Chair, I will be sharing my time with Ms. Brown.
First of all, thank you very much for your attendance today.
I want to let you know that there is another group of people out there, and I'm one of them. I'm from northern Alberta, so maybe that sets me aside a bit from normal Canadians. But I look at the passenger protect program over here and the trusted traveller program over here, and we are working from both ends to come to the middle. I don't want to talk about the passenger protect program; I want to talk about the trusted traveller program.
Why I say there are different people out there is that I travel a lot. I'm a “Super Elite” member on Air Canada. I fly back and forth to Fort McMurray. I've travelled the world. I like travelling. I'm totally prepared to let the U.S. or any government, any democracy, have any amount of information they want on me--just don't make me wait in line. That's my position.
I don't want to wait in line. I'm tired of lineups. I wait in lines all the time. I don't have to wait in line to get into this place. I don't have to go through any security to be here with all the cabinet ministers and all the MPs, but I have to wait in Ottawa for half an hour, and sometimes for an hour, as we heard from our friend Mr. Volpe, at Lester B. Pearson airport. It's a long time.
I want to talk very briefly about privileges and the right or the privilege--because we don't have a right to fly. We do have rights under the charter, but the right to fly is not one of them, if I can say this. I'm a lawyer by background, so I understand that the Supreme Court has said there's no right to drive. It's a privilege to drive, and that's why you have to get a licence, and that licence can be taken away at the whim of the state.
It's the same with flying. It's the same with going through our airports. There's no right to go through our airports and there's no right to fly, just like there's no right to go over American airspace. It's a privilege for Canadians to be able to fly our planes over American airspace, and it's a privilege for us to drive.
From my perspective, you can just take my information and keep it as long as you want, a hundred years if you want, because I'll be gone by then. I don't care as long as it's not a VISA number or my e-mail, because I don't want to be contacted either. Just take my information and let me go through.
What do you say to that?