Whistling Dixie. I didn't know you all knew about Dixie.
I think it's complicated. The suffering of an individual patient is case by case. All I can tell you is that we've seen it here too.
As I said, depleted uranium is, I think, lower on the list of our current veterans' concerns than it was 20 years ago. Has it been completely eliminated? I don't know; not necessarily. There are many, many issues in play here.
I don't want to burn up your time, sir, so to go back to your first question, there has not been an autopsy study, per se, of veterans. There have been autopsy studies in the old DOE, Department of Energy workers who were involved in the Manhattan project, for example, from 50 or 60 years ago.
In fact, a lot of those data did inform our very early work here. It really helped the researchers and the clinicians to put certain concerns at bay.
To tell you the truth, our energy workers were exposed to more highly dangerous concentrations of uranium and other radiation-related products than it appears, happily, our veterans were.