Thank you, David.
I have just one question. It doesn't really relate to remembrance—although in a way it does. We had a brief discussion on it at another committee meeting.
In the business that we're in, or that anybody's in, it's knowing your audience and communicating with your audience, with veterans. It sort of ties in with your comments regarding the modern-day veterans. The department has no list—you've said that the government doesn't compile lists of people--but maybe this is something we should really seriously have a look at. Maybe the Department of Veterans Affairs should have a list of who they can communicate with on short notice.
As you said, the modern-day veterans really don't feel like they're veterans. Your department doesn't have a list of any veterans, really, because you're not allowed to. Should we be having the discussion of allowing your department the ability to compile a list of veterans so that we, or Veterans Affairs, can communicate directly with the veterans in acts of remembrance, in keeping in contact with the veterans, in communications?
I know you guys do your best, but I think it's a lot of them coming to you rather than you going to them. It's a policy of government, or somewhere there, that they don't compile lists. Should we be having the discussion of possibly allowing the department to compile a list of veterans?