I think so. Just to throw the Legion under the bus for a moment—even though that wasn't part of your question, I think it's a good example—at the last Remembrance Day ceremony I was at in Stettler, they were talking about World War I and World War II, and that was it. They didn't even mention Korea, the Balkans—where I was—or Afghanistan.
There are still a lot of people within the bureaucracy who don't even see us as veterans. They don't consider us to be veterans, and that's the problem right there. I would imagine there's some overlap in Veterans Affairs Canada. Even with my classification—I served in Croatia during the genocide in 1994, smack dab in the middle of the war—I'm not considered a war veteran because I was with the UN. It was a “special duty area”. I think that's what they call it. There are different classifications of veterans that entitle you to different levels of benefits depending on where you served. It's like not calling Korea a war. Well, it was a war, and I certainly served in a war zone, but it's one of the challenges—