 But these murders are consistent with murders that have happened as long as we've been here in this country. We don't have to go to 2020. We can start at 1892 when Ida B. Wells documented the lynching of her friend who had the nerve to start a grocery store on the same block that a white man had one. The long end of that short story was the white man was able to acquire the black man's store for eight cents on the dollar, eight cents on the dollar. And we can talk about Wilmington, North Carolina in 1898 when the anecdotal evidence was that the river ran red. They said there were 60 or 70 dead people. Now they're fighting a 600 or 700. And then of course there's Tulsa. And why is this all connected? It's connected because in our psyches, in our psyches, there is a block in terms of how we participate, how we manage what we do.