 So I do think it's a great question because one of the things I keep hearing in this ladner's remark is the quiet of everyday life that made it possible to have the space and the energy even to recuperate from a day of protest, whereas we are so connected. We are deluged by information and there may even be a false sense of commitment by virtue of participating in the train of information, as if that is sufficient to the task before us. And I do wonder if millennials and even Gen X or myself have a false sense of being involved in something without really being involved. And that's not to speak to the young people we see in the streets, but it is to speak to where do we draw the line between the moment and the movement, because you can get your pictures on Instagram, you can get your vines, video, and you can show your friends I was there in your selfie moments if you died and then what?