To clarify that, I think what I meant was that all veterans experience the burden of technology support, not just the young ones.
In my experience in working with younger veterans, I know that it comes back to identity. Some of the younger veterans I have worked with have served for five or six years, for instance, and they've released and then gone on to other careers. They've gone on to become a teacher or an electrician, for instance. Oftentimes that service gets forgotten, but the impacts of that service still exist. I think it's important to bring light to that.
I go back to the core of this, and service records are vital. The release screenings are vital. Those conditions perhaps didn't exist the day they released, but they can exist in a year or two years, and it's important to do proper follow-up.
It's important to recognize that no matter the stint of time they spent in the RCMP or the Canadian Armed Forces, it was time served to our country, and the impacts of that still exist even if they've left.