The only motivation that I've always had in doing what I managed to do in the last 12 years of my career was the motivation to think that if it's bad for me, imagine what it's like for the privates and corporals. That was my motivation for everything I ever tried to do or achieve, and yet again, when I was released 13 years after starting to work on all these systemic problems, the very issues that were present 12 years ago, such as the lack of transition services between DND advising Veterans Affairs that Grenier is taking these pills and please make sure that the coverage is right and I went to the pharmacy and all of a sudden I had to pay out of my pocket. That is not the issue. I had the $180 to get my pills, and I didn't go without. But what if you are somebody with a low income who doesn't have a job and who has to find $180? What happens to these soldiers or veterans? Well, they go without, and when you stop medication, that's not a good thing.
An issue that existed 12 years ago, which I along with so many others thought was over, unbeknownst to me, it happened to me. Again, the question is, if it happened to Grenier, it must be happening to someone else.