We interrupt it by making sure that there is a cadre of dynamic young black people, including women and queer folks and trans folks and working class people who directly from their experience are telling their story directly. We have organizers and leaders in the Bay area and in St. Louis and in NewYork and in the Midwest and in the South. So the Movement for Black Lives now is ecosystem of more than 150 organizations and dozens and dozens of leaders who are powerful in their own right. Who are not asking for permission for some hierarchy of leadership to tell them what the cues are, who are developing in their context, in their community, innovative ways of organizing. And we're learning from one another quickly and adapting quickly. It's an organic movement. It is an ecosystem approach to resistance.