Perhaps, and I think that all Canadians enjoyed a postwar economic boom. Again, to go back to the conversation with Mr. Dowdall, the greater help that the veterans of the Second World War had is that they came back to a country where 1.1 million Canadians had served. Those who didn't serve understood what they had gone through. There wasn't that isolation that there is for the younger veterans of Afghanistan.
It's still hard. Ninety-nine-year-old veterans I've spoken to have talked about PTSD using different vocabulary, and I recognize what they're saying, but they weren't isolated. They were surrounded by people who understood what they did and who often had taken part in those efforts.
The experience for veterans today is, I think, very different, because they're not surrounded by people who were part of that same effort. I think that dislocation is more profound, and perhaps being surrounded by people who understood them was even more helpful in the post-Second World War era than the economic stability that they were enjoying, as we all were.