 I think anybody who sexually assaults a young child, like I was a victim at 14, then I was a victim probably because this happened to me again a couple of years ago, I was a sexual assault victim again a couple of years ago. So I've been sexually assaulted three times, I think it needs to stop. And I think people need to come to awareness about sexual assault, they need to come to awareness about this. This week, Massachusetts State Auditor, Suzanne Bump, discovered the Sex Offender Registry Board lost track of hundreds of offenders in their system. Cambridge residents expressed mixed feelings when we asked them, how do you feel about the state losing track of this many offenders? A seemingly benign neighbor, according to the law, I thought previously had to be identified to the community, isn't that the case? And if that's no longer the case, they are immersed within the community and might potentially re-offend in a very costly manner, so it worries me a lot. I do worry about the tracking of sex offenders for life and their being kept in a registry, only because I think it really goes against an ethic of recovery that we sort of depend on and it really betrays the extent to which we believe in the ability for people to repay their debt to society and afterwards live a fulfilling life. I feel like it's ridiculous. I don't feel safe knowing that information. I have younger siblings, like we live in the community, it's not a good feeling knowing that the state has lost people that are potentially threatening to our community. I mean, I guess it's disturbing in the abstract because I don't know that I've ever checked a list like that, but if I were worried and I did want to check such a list, I would want it to be reliable, obviously, and it's almost disturbing that what's disturbing about it for me is that we depend on these things. We depend on these institutionalized lists and whatnot, and we almost assume that they're sort of infallible, even though obviously they're not. So it's sort of the, we need to think about it more.