Well, I'm recommending that you follow up on my own recommendations about how the government can mitigate this. Obviously, the recommendation of whether or not you adopt this bill goes to other considerations, such as economics, travel patterns of Canadians, and so on. But we must put this also into the context of a world in which increasingly a lot of personal information will be given out in order to board an airplane, either to the airlines or, in the case now, to DHS.
I think this is a pattern that is going to become more acute as time goes on, with the European Union looking at these kinds of measures, and with Canada itself having its own requirements for people who fly into this country, in terms of personal information, and so on. So the decision whether to push back or not I think rests with this committee, and on a variety of issues, as I understand.
From a privacy point of view, if the bill were to pass, there's still a very dynamic stance that the Canadian government could take in relation to this.