Thank you, Anthony.
You say you're very soldier-oriented in your preparation and so on. We're finding out that it really should be a family-oriented situation. You've probably read Mr. LeClair's articles in the paper recently, where there's a huge effect on the family, on the wives and children of these returning soldiers, some who have and some who have not sustained injuries in Afghanistan or Bosnia and so on. They really feel helpless because a lot of times they don't know where to go, and they get accused, or their husbands get accused, of milking the system and shirking their duties and not being men, not really being counselled into other employment. There's a whole list of things they're saying they're not getting.
It's not just the soldier; it's a much bigger concentric circle here. What are we doing with regard to a more universal response to these situations?