This information belongs to Canadians, the taxpayers who paid for its production.
How he determined what information belonged in each was beyond my understanding.
Some information - a sales pitch, for example - simply does not belong on account statements.
The protected information may belong to the company itself or to its customers.
But much other information, including matters the government might like to bottle up to avoid debate, belongs in the public domain.
Bear in mind that this information belongs to Christopher, not the government.
"And now we're realizing that this information really belongs to the members."
And the compiled information still belongs to everyone (at least, under the Free licence).
The fact the information belongs to the US government is not in question?
It is based on the view that information belongs to the government.