Thank you.
I actually had a couple of points here that I wanted to try to galvanize a question with. You did just make a very vehement statement that nobody is going to capture the Afghan vets, yet there are a substantial number, and we've heard evidence that they feel displaced, etc. You mentioned your personal experience, and that it's traumatic being disassociated from the service. No matter how much we would hope that it wouldn't happen, it happens after an injury. There's a certain kind of therapeutic, cathartic--whatever word you want to call it--element of fellowship that happens. If you want to go back to the Band of Brothers series, there's that identity that happens among themselves.
We've had witnesses here from the OSISS program who particularly highlighted the fact that when someone who has had military service now deals with someone with an operational stress injury, the bond that comes from serving in the military, and that can only come from there, gives that added dimension of capability of really hitting somebody in the heart. All of that said, do you see any way for the organizations that exist today--the particularly big catchment would be the legions--to try to address the veterans?
We've had veterans here from Bosnia as well who felt they were displaced. Is there anything that your organization...or do you have any ideas to try to capture the hearts and minds of these folks so that they have a place to come to, so that they have a place of continued brotherhood, so that they do heal and have prosperous lives after their military service?