Perhaps I could take a start at answering that question. Obviously, I'm very cautious about drawing direct comparisons. The devastating impact of residential schools stands as such a horror in Canada that I'll be very careful to not draw comparisons.
We know that the LGBT purge had a devastating effect on some estimated 9,000 Canadians, people who were trying to serve their country in the Canadian Armed Forces, public service and the RCMP. These folks were giving their all, and in some cases their lives, to serve Canadians and Canada, and yet they were treated horribly by the state. I think we're doing everything we can to try to tell these stories.
There's a great documentary done by Sarah Fodey called The Fruit Machine. It's available for free online and you can have a look at it. It really shows quite viscerally the impact and the trauma of the purge.
We're going to tell that story through the national monument and through an exhibit at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, and in some ways take off a little bit of the veneer that everything was okay. It wasn't okay, and we have to tell those hard stories.
I think all Canadians are coming to terms with some of the history that we have been through.