 To know that your voice does matter, and it's a great opportunity for them to come, learn a lot of good information about who they are, the system, as being males of color, to be able to share their experiences. What my hope here was today was just to kind of reinforce what it is to be, what the true definition of masculinity is. It's about being a willingness to be vulnerable, it's a willingness to open up, it's a willingness to show strength, not in the way that we're taught, such as through violence or hypersexuality, but through responsibility, through self-control, through restraint. And so these are the things that really help to, will help to ameliorate a lot of the issues that we're having in minority communities, and especially with our minority males. And so that was the purpose of me coming today, and I think this conference is fantastic for that very purpose. I'm very proud to be a part of it, and I strongly encourage anybody who wants to send their child to this, a young male to their child to this conference, I strongly encourage it. It is something that is sorely needed. I saw young men break down walls and move forward. I saw, I saw adults come in to support young men. I saw a lot of hope be given today. And I saw many students get excited for the futures that they deserve to have. For me, the Youth Summit is really a chance to think about the importance of education, the power of education, but also the value of these children and the real chance that hopefully they'll have to make a contribution to this nation, to their communities and really to fashion better lives for themselves, lives that, as I spoke about earlier today, really speak to the issues of freedom and equality and justice, ideas that hopefully lead them towards education and lead them towards the best possible future lives that they can have.