I have just one final comment on all this. I would just say that there's an army of people at the community level who would be willing to step forward and help. I actually personally intend to spend the rest of my time working on this and bringing victims and families to the forefront.
We have 14,000 people a year. With a couple of parents, in most cases, grandfathers, kids, brothers, and sisters, there are probably 75,000, 80,000, or 100,000 new people a year in that club. Most of these people, because of the trauma that's happened, are shell-shocked. They lack counselling, unlike for cancer or other things. They're left, all of a sudden, with a departed son. For all of these other health issues that happen or occur after the fact, there's actually no support in our health care systems anywhere to help.
You can actually encourage, mobilize, and peer-support people to come forward and actually support you in your efforts across the country if we can only tap into those kinds of volunteer activities, as we have with AIDS, cancer, and others.