Well, I think we're on the same page on a lot of issues, Doctor.
I'm glad you recognize the difference also between traditional and modern-day veterans. So I go back to the original question that I asked you.
We talk about the traditional veteran, and there was an enormous stigma attached to any kind of admission at all that you couldn't handle what you had gone through, that you had some psychological scarring from it. I've been dealing with traditional veterans for so many years, and I've found that just in the last couple of years many of them are now opening up and talking about their experiences. They're going to talk to children in schools to relay what happened in their lives.
So that healing process is long overdue, but at least that ability to get the message out about what you've suffered, what you went through, is now happening for our 80-plus-year-old veterans.
Going back to what I asked you before, what can Veterans Affairs Canada do to change the negative stereotype for veterans who suffer from PTSD? What can we do that makes it all right for them to say, here's how I feel, here's what I went through, I need help?