Colonel, do you also feel that the last part could be used to help our older soldiers, those who came back from combat several years ago, those whom we often see on Remembrance Day, still in a great deal of distress?
They were never told that they suffered from post-traumatic stress. They always believed that they are as they are because they had been broken, that they were not tough enough, not masculine enough, not men. They are ashamed to show the distress that still affects them.
Do you believe that the third part of the program could help them to combat those old stereotypes?