I certainly don't have a strong opinion either way on it myself. But it does occur to me—as acknowledged around the table by all—that many of our veterans are elderly, certainly those from the Second World War and Korea, and the easier we, as a country, can make it for them to seek redress, seek the programs to which they are entitled, the better service we'll provide to them.
When it comes to the bill of rights itself—I'm relatively new to this committee—there is the new charter, and we try to square the efforts of a charter and what a bill of rights might do. I know a lot of progress was made under the previous administration.
Could you summarize, with a bill of rights, if there were one overriding concern or objective you would write into that charter, if you had to pick just one, what would that number one be? To me it would act as a starting point; you want to start with people's first priorities.