One of the things we're working through, and we're certainly working with the government on, is that, you're right, as people are released or self-released from the military, it can be very difficult for them to go from feeling like they've had a career where they've been serving and it's quite purposeful, to all of a sudden not knowing what to do. That can be quite devastating for them. We hear about suicides, about depression, about all kinds of different things.
I don't know that there's a single answer to this, but we need to figure out some sort of coordinated system to get to those people before they are released, and help them figure out what their options might be upon release so they don't suddenly find themselves without a job. There's one individual right now who we've gotten to know. He stepped on an IED in Afghanistan and 80% of his frontal lobe was bruised. He came back and said, “I know I'm different; everybody's telling me I am. I can't see it for myself, but I know I am.” His wife left him. His family somewhat abandoned him. He almost committed suicide. He is really struggling to figure out what his place is in the world now, because he's not serving anymore and he's really looking for something meaningful.
We don't think government should do it all. There's a role for the charitable sector, and there's a role for the corporate sector, in all of this. If there's a way that we can cooperate among those sectors to figure out the right network for people leaving the military so they have a sense that there are jobs there for them and the corporate world wants to hire them, I think it would go a long way.