No.
Sir, you're absolutely correct. There are a lot of veterans from World War II on who have mental health issues, and are actually what we describe as high-functioning. They're able to do their job. They're able to raise a family. They're able to have a spouse who still stays with them and still have symptoms that, if they came in to mental health, could actually get help and feel better.
We try to tell all of the soldiers who are coming back that one of the things with having served your country in a combat environment is you deserve to enjoy life to its fullest without any remorse, and without any pain. You need to come in and get help if you have any of these things. If you're not enjoying life, come in and get help, because you're entitled to enjoy life. Soldiers sort of connect with that sense of they've sacrificed, and now we need to take care of them. The psychological stigma of admitting to a mental health problem is very real; it's large. Many soldiers consider it a character flaw, or character weakness.
One of the things that we do know for certain is when our veterans get older and start going to the Department of Veterans Affairs, one of the key things that they have to treat is post-traumatic stress in the veterans who never got help before, but they are there for other types of physical ailments that our Department of Veterans Affairs takes care of. Now it has really sort of launched this whole training effort within the Department of Veterans Affairs on how do you treat the elderly who have mental health problems. Before, it was always sort of the young to middle age veterans who came in, but as the population starts aging, now all of a sudden we have this very large elderly population with mental health issues, and we have to ask, you know, do the same treatments that work in 20-year-olds work in 80-year-olds? We don't know the answer, but it is being looked at. We need to do a better job. I completely agree with you.