You sound like my wife telling me I have to think the cold away.
But if I may, getting down to serious matters, I'm also on the public safety and national security committee. We have seen in all areas of federal government, all government services, where the government provides—to the taxpayer—services to the ill and injured. In particular in this case, it's people who suffer from mental illness or stress-caused injuries, as we see in the armed forces. We see that there is, and please do correct me if I'm wrong, a chronic shortage of psychiatrists, psychologists, and people in that field right across society, and in some cases especially in government services, because some professionals like a broad base of injury type, whereas in the prison system they're all pretty much the same thing, and with AIDS it's all pretty well the same types of illnesses or people are suffering along the same lines.
If we could use that societal comparison—and you have the experience in both fields—could you compare wait times, the availability of professionals both in the civilian field and the military field, and in particular, could you transition—if we have time—into the differences between the experiences you've seen from Bosnia and Herzegovina right down through to today from Afghanistan?