 Well, let me give you this example. Probably the most, the component of 21st Century Sailor Marine that's received the most attention is the introduction of alcohol detection devices across the fleet. And I appreciate this opportunity to explain the rationale, how we got there, how it's going to work going forward. We know that the lone common denominator across all of our most pressing personnel problems, sexual assault, suicide, personal safety, is one thing. And that's the misuse of alcohol. Now, I always start this by saying that especially 10 years into this longer sustained combat operations in American history, if relaxing with alcohol is your way to blow off steam and you can do so legally, responsibly, and be ready to go on Monday morning, then no one in your chain of command has any problem with that. You write it. But to ignore the statistics that we see come across our desk every day, the fact that 40% of the suicides that we are able to assess involved alcohol, that we're still averaging about 19 DUIs a month across the Navy side, a little bit higher on the Marine Corps side, that the correlation between sexual assault and alcohol is almost direct. We knew that it would be irresponsible to ignore this dynamic. So in the same way that we changed a culture of drug use throughout the 80s with the introduction of random-year analysis tests, that took us from a 27% figure of personnel who had an illicit drug in their systems in the previous 30 days to today's figure about .01%, complete change of culture. We wanted to find a dramatic tool to help us with this. Now, ADD will work a little bit different. It's designed to be an education tool, a training tool to help Navy leaders do what they do best, to lead, to step in and be able to recognize that, hey, Garcia has been late twice this month and he blew a .04 on his duty day. I wonder if something's going on at home that I can get involved with and help prevent and stave off a career debilitating incident or, God forbid, a life debilitating incident. So it will be ADD, the alcohol detection devices, which are on their way to every command in the Navy and will be operational fleet-wide by May of this year. It will be used by folks reporting for duty or in a duty section. It's not a liberty tool. It's not an end-strength reduction strategy. It's ensuring that when you go to work and work on reactors and the most sophisticated technology the world has ever seen, you'll know that the shipmate working next to you is safe, is ready, and is prepared to carry his share of the load as well.