I understand.
Maybe you don't understand, and maybe I haven't communicated properly, that the security perimeter is the airport, sir, the international airports that are all connected by flights. That's the security perimeter. Inside of each of those airports is a perimeter, and those are guarded by people and countries and by police who guard that perimeter from terrorists. It's a perimeter, and they're all connected by flights, because once you get within that perimeter.... You're not searched once you're inside an airport, except the initial time that you go in. That's the point. That's the security perimeter.
But what I fail to understand, sir, is this. I'm going to give you a scenario.
You have a hockey tournament taking place in Halifax. Kids from New York and all over the United States fly up to Halifax, and they go through Toronto. So they fly from New York up to Toronto, and they carry their skates on the plane. Now a different group of individuals, but playing in the same tournament, come from Edmonton, and they fly from Edmonton to Toronto. They're not allowed to take their skates on. So we have these American team guys who are in Toronto with their skates, and we have people from all over Canada who have come for the same tournament, because they're going to fly from Toronto to Halifax, and they don't have their skates because they're not allowed to.
How does that make the stewardesses you represent any safer, with half of them on the plane, for instance in Toronto, going to fly to Halifax with skates and half without? There's no logic to me in that, sir. I'm trying to understand. I'm using skates.... I can't even imagine somebody running up and down the isle of an airplane with a skate and terrorizing me. That's not going to terrorize me, to be honest. But I'm using this as an example.
As a criminal lawyer.... And the reason it's not terrorizing me is that in Fort McMurray, for more than ten years I saw people killed with bottles.... Well, I never saw them, but I saw the evidence afterwards; I saw the evidence of bottles. I even saw a person beaten to death with the jaw of a dead moose, believe it or not. Knives, bottles.... The worst weapon you can have in a bar is a broken bottle, and there are tons of bottles on airplanes all across the world. Zip ties also.... You mentioned handcuffs, but zip ties that riot police use throughout the world I don't think have ever been illegal on planes. But zip ties are as good as any metal handcuff. I'm not familiar with whether they have...except if they designated them as a restraining device before two years ago. Did they do that?