On the whole issue about JPSU, I'm not sure if there's an answer to that one. There are people who went to JPSU and say that it was the best thing that happened to them and their whole lives changed. There are others who say that as soon as they went there, it was the kiss of death. A lot of it is their own perception and potentially the micro-culture of the units they come from.
Remember that I said we've made major progress in terms of stigma from a senior leadership perspective. I think we still have significant challenges at the more junior level.
Here I will make a point, and I've made this many times to senior leadership, about what I call the self-stigma. Often soldiers are willing to give somebody else a break, but they stigmatize themselves quite significantly because they can no longer function in a certain way. The stigma is both external and internal. You have to know where the stigma is actually coming from. Is it from their buddies? Is it from the unit leadership. Is it partially from themselves? It may be a combination of all of those, depending on the micro-culture that exists in various places.
As I say, some people love JPSU, and other people are not so keen on it. What I can tell you is that the JPSU does deliver what I call one-stop shopping.