We made cuts, yes, and it is sad. Ten years ago, when I was a member of this House, I went to the Collège militaire de Saint-Jean to study French, and I am sad at the idea of closing this college. As I said during Question Period, there will be a military college in Kingston, a national military college for all Canadians, where everything will be done in both official languages. I see the hon. member does not believe me.
These people over there say one thing every night on the news in Quebec; I watch the news from Quebec. They say one thing there and another thing here. They do not believe in the same concept of Canada we believe in.
The hon. member for Charlesbourg stood in the House and said, as have some of his colleagues, that there cannot be a bilingual college because it is not in Quebec. What about the million francophones who live outside Quebec? What about them? I do not get upset very often, but I get upset when I hear that kind of rhetoric. That kind of rhetoric tries to tear the country apart and we are not going to have any part of it.
Before I lose my composure let me say I am really concerned about some of the two-faced comments I have heard on the closing of the military college in Quebec.