Yes, that's what'll happen. The thing is, it is the job of Veterans Affairs to find a way to protect these people and to keep them in their homes as long as possible. I think communication between.... Well, everybody knows if there are veterans in their communities. It's their job to do this. This is why.
They have a list of the people who served in the armed forces. That's why I'm saying that, and that's why we're here. They're not doing this.
For example, we have people up north who say they're not going back there because they're refused pension. They are told they don't qualify. It's stuff like that. People are really touchy on this, especially aboriginal people--really touchy. When you tell them they don't qualify, I tell them to go back, because the old saying was that you've got to go to the DVA three or four times before you get accepted. They say, “Well, I'm not going back there again.”
That's the way they think. You're not going to change them if they're 80 years old and, as you say, from northern Quebec. How do you communicate?
That's why I went to a newsletter. A lot of them can't read or write or understand. They've no education. How do you communicate? Some guy got up and said, “Well, get on your computer.” I said, “Christ, they haven't got computers, the guys up north.” Some of them have, and some of them haven't. They have to have people reading their mail for them. This is the way it goes.