Mr. Speaker, first of all, may I say that the hon. member is from a generation that probably understands this better than I do. Her core question is, what happens when all of this data starts to get collected and how will that be used? In asking that question, she asks something very profound because we actually do not know how this data is going to be used. We do not know how it will be used and abused.
I will give an example of the abuse of power. I come from a multi-ethnic riding, and from time to time people come to my office who have had trouble at the border based upon the similarity of their names with others'. They just try to get those problems cleared up. It takes months and years, and sometimes it just cannot be done.
That is on a minor issue, but how this data is used and abused is yet to be discussed; hence, the reason for a parliamentary committee sworn to secrecy to act as a supervisory entity.