 Typically what happens when an entrepreneur has an idea, someone says to them, hey, you need to get money from your friends and family. And that's not going to work when you think about the racial wealth gap. The statistic is something like white American families have an average of $143,000 of wealth versus African American families that have $11,000 in wealth. And so who can you really go to for friends and family money if that's the wealth of the families in your community? On the other side of the spectrum, the other place that people might tell you to go to get capital is go get a loan. And to go into a bank that has systemically redlined and maybe even profiled you is not going to happen either because the banks require so much documentation and if those bank statements don't tie out to what they want, then they're just going to automatically deny you. Entrepreneurs of color need the kind of capital that's going to be flexible and integrated and is going to have that support just like a family member would give them. We have to reconcile what we intellectually understand about race, power and privilege and then also feel it in our bodies and our hearts and how it moves us to think deeper about the systems of how philanthropic money or how impact investing dollars get allocated to different projects or different programs or different companies. That's a different way of thinking. How to do that on an institutional basis as opposed to on an individual basis.