That's a great point. Obviously, I'm not a veteran myself. I can't speak for others, although I have studied numerous interviews and oral histories with indigenous veterans.
I think there's real frustration. Some of it is about financial supports, but it's not just about that. It's about recognition of the contributions that they've made. I think reconciliation is a process. It's not a one-and-done, and it's not something that can be an event and then we're finished with it. I think that's where some of the frustration is coming from.
There are veterans, and there are, in some cases, residential school survivors who are also veterans. They're implementing the truth part of “truth and reconciliation”, and I think that it's on us as institutions to implement the reconciliation part and to follow through. I think it's a lot easier to say the right things than it is to follow through and do the right things.