Our organization at the time was a member of the NCVA. As Chairman Forbes has brought it out, that was our position in those days.
Concerning what we have today, I can remember that when I was young, at the end of World War II, there were gratuities. People, including our family members, the ones who survived the war, came home in 1947, and they had options—the Veterans' Land Act and that kind of thing. I don't recall any great controversies or upsets with people, and my grandfather was an expert on these things.
But what I'm trying to say is that five years later, in 1950, when the call to arms went out again for the young people in our families and across the country for the Korean War, had the provisions they had at the end of World War II been insufficient and caused a lot of problems, our family and many of the others from across the country would have said no to their sons going until they were fixed. That's what will happen here.
There's a website I was going to point out today called Wars in the World. Right now there are about 256 conflicts going on. There is a potential always that two or three of them could blow up. Who is going to fight this war? Until this is fixed, I can tell you right now that on our website we'll have banners saying that nobody is going. We don't want anybody going until this is fixed. It has to be fixed.