There are a dozen areas I'd like to go to. I realize that, and I think that's why this year's particularly pivotal in making the changes and adjustments. I think it's very important to get on record what you see as the timing of and the unveiling of, if you like, the start point and the measurements that go with it.
I was at the conference Raymond Lalonde was at in Montreal just a couple of weeks ago. I did want to raise a point, because it seems to come through all this. Of course, that's the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies. For the first time Veterans Affairs Canada was a partner there.
One of the things that was said there, in the brief time I was there, and it seems to be an extremely important thing for us to consider, was about the stigma and the public education or understanding. You hear it over and over again that if only the public--the public being all of us--would treat this as easily as it treats physical injuries, we'd be making a lot of progress in terms of moving forward.
I guess the stigma question is what I wanted to raise specifically in light of that conference. Do you see progress being made such that people, particularly these veterans who are in this circumstance, are more prepared to come forward because the public is more accepting?