Yes. I very quickly want to make and clarify one comment here. You don't get citizenship for being here for 1,095 days. If you're here for 1,095 days and you're a Canadian, that means that you have the right to confer citizenship to your child. You don't just get to show up, live here and get it. That's an immigrant.
I made up the name “lost Canadians” years ago. Governments don't tend to say, “Look, if you go look under that rock over there, you're going to discover some dirt on our country.” All I knew at the time was that I wasn't Canadian. Then the Internet came out. I put it out there, and people started contacting me. Then we discovered a lot of ways that Canada had been stripping people of their citizenship. For example, here's one that's coming: When did citizenship begin? Well, the government says it began in 1947, but it didn't; it began with Confederation.
There are all kinds of ways, we've discovered, so we've just been categorically calling people like that “lost Canadians”. That's how it came about.