We have an obligation toward the people who are put here, in this territory, and toward those people who speak French, in order that the individual, wherever in Quebec he is born, should have equality of possibilities, can participate in political power, can participate in economic power, can participate so that all other powers be accessible to him... We have to take back what belongs to us or used to belong to us... We have to take back these things. These things are clear and precise: they are the natural riches, they are the individuals condemned to do nothing, condemned to unemployment — Do you think that this is what they want? Do you think someone out of work has an interest in unemployment benefits? At a given moment he can become hooked on unemployment benefits, but he has no interest in it; what he wants is to work, and this according to who he is, what his identity is, not to work in order to imitate someone else. To work as a Quebecois and work on his own territory — and we've got the possibility! There are people who say that we are a prosperous people and all that! So I say sincerely: look at what this prosperity is: it’s a prosperity of expropriation! Here in Quebec we're in the process of emptying out all the riches we have, and in twenty years, when everything will have been emptied out, there will be no one left but tourists!!..., He delivered this speech at his trial on March 12, 1971. He was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison, but was released in December 1982. There’s an old fisherman in Gaspesie who would say to us: “when there’s a storm, I head for Percé., Jacques Rose was acquitted of kidnapping and murder, but was later sentenced to eight years on a conviction for being an accessory to the crimes. The trial of cell leader Paul Rose was punctuated by angry rants from the accused. He was convicted and sentenced to life in prison, like Simard..