 I was glad that Raphael also mentioned our friends from Brazil who made an extraordinary impact on this conference through our numbers of panels and through an incredible meeting of folks from the global south to look at race and economics and global drug policy, its work that will continue, if they build walls, we build bridges. One of the people who was so extraordinary was a brother named Wagner Morea Campos. He's here with us, he's got to make a flight, and so we thank you for pushing it to the limit. Joining him is our senior manager of international policy, Hannah Hetzer, who speaks about 95 languages and puts us all to shame, but Hannah and Wagner, would you please come to the stage. And I think we need Mike one-turn, Don. Good evening everyone. The last three days have been full of rich debate with people from around the world. But our main aim in coming here was to denounce the genocide of black Brazilians, a genocide that is responsible for the deaths of 60,000 people a year. The war on drugs is a big part of the justification used in white supremacy and the genocide against black Brazilians and incarcerating us and then killing us when we're inside the prisons. A third of the prison population in Brazil is there for trafficking of small quantities of drugs. This month marks the 25th anniversary of the biggest massacre in a Brazilian prison where 111 people were killed behind bars. In the first day of January of 2016, 56 people were killed in a prison in Brazil. So what I'm saying with this is that the war on drugs not only kills us in the streets, it kills us behind bars. We need to decriminalize and legalize the consumption and sale of drugs to end the genocide of black Brazilians. I am certain that these three days of this conference has helped push us to fight for the end of the war on drugs and the end of the genocide of black Brazilians. Thank you.