 There are these things we do not talk about, and our silence is creating a burden in America. I don't think any of us are free. And I think we've got to do something to get closer to freedom. And that means we have to talk about some things we haven't talked about. My great-grandfather, Thomas William Miles Sr., was lynched. It's shocking to me that there's very few places in this country where you can go and have an honest experience with the history of slavery. There are no places you can go and have an honest experience with the history of lynching. And I think that has to change. I think we really do have to create those spaces. You know, I was in front of that map, my grandmother left Selma, my grandfather left Tuskegee, and I never thought about it quite that way, you know, to think like this is what they grew up in. It's a very powerful experience, actually. You can take in history and data, if you will, and then have another experience with the art. All of these elements can work together. The reason why we are here, we want to liberate America for its history, but we can't get to liberation without truth. You can't get to reconciliation without truth. We're going to do something better in this nation. We're going to get to a better place.