I can try. To be honest, though, I'm not sure if it's something the government can solve. I think the biggest challenge is the loneliness. It's a dislocation. You go from one community to another community. I remember one veteran who lives in Ottawa. He said that he lives in a city of a million people, and nobody knows what he did. That's disquieting. There's a certain dislocation there.
I don't know if the government can solve that. We live in a society where most Canadians have spent the last 10 years trying to forget that we ever were in Afghanistan, but veterans who were there have not forgotten, and that continues in their lives. There's that disconnect between the lived experience of veterans and—