I will just get then to the final question. As I said, you've already begun to speak about. How do we remedy some of these issues regarding the racialization and racism from a linguistic context? That's a great question. [inaudible] how can we undo these racist institutions that have become our legacy? I do not know. There is a one solution but I think it calls for us to continue to be critical and conscious and to not take for granted. Like you said at the beginning, there are certain things that we assume that that's just universal and therefore let us start it at a neutral point, to realize that no, this is not. Even knowledge in and [inaudible] as we know it within the Western context, is not a neutral place to begin with. Part of being a student, this is what James Baldwin says, and I believe that, part of being someone who is involved in your own education is also learning how to be independent-minded, to be critical, and to not just take for granted what is handed over you. It is asking those questions and beginning to really look at even things that we take for granted; little jokes, and to look at what is really behind them. I'm not saying that you need to freeze. Sometimes we have to fall in order to be able to get up and dust ourselves and to be a little better, but to continue to keep that critical consciousness. I think part of the problem is our amnesia. That, "Oh, yeah, this a problem I just read about it, I understood it, but I want to quickly deal with it so that I can go on and go back to what is called normal life." No. This calls for process every day. It calls for deep listening and an openness and also just beginning radically to say, "Wow, there are different ways of knowing." There are different Englishes. There's nation language, for instance, coming out of Jamaica. That's a version of English. There's the British Broadcasting Corporation, BBC. They have a whole segment on what they call West African English, and it's also just legitimate with scholars. So beginning to open our minds to the world because really the epistemologies that we have inherited, they are not humanizing epistemologies. It is up to us to do that. These things such as race and racism in language is not something that is statistic and stays. It's something that we continue to refine and continue to create every day and continue to uphold everyday. That's something that we need to be mindful of. Even sometimes, listening to statements that are made by our leaders, may look like a neutral statement, but it's a certain particular way that a US president can insult Africa in a particular context that we might just take it as that person as being insane. But that only applies to, if you look at the way it applies specifically to Africa, it is deeply embedded on white supremacy and colonization. Absolutely. These are the things that we need to be able to understand. Absolutely. We see it in our media so much. We see it and hear it in movies, on television shows, comedies, stand up comedians, so on and so forth, and it's like Africa is the central foundation of all of our existences. Why is it still, in many regards, the context of ridicule? Would you talk about your mother in this way? That is our mother. We need to start treating Africa as our mother because that is what that continent is. Any parting words or comments that you like to make before we are in this, Awon? Well, I thank you for the work that you're doing, and I applaud you and your students. Remember this type of work that I will just say, it's not only in the classroom, it goes beyond the classroom. The other thing that I would say is that we have not been given a legacy or examples of a lived experience in the United States that is anti-racist. Please, this is something that you need to explore for yourself, and you need to follow, and you need to allow yourself to make mistakes and to learn from your mistakes and to keep going. Absolutely. Dr. Awon Atuire, everyone. Always a pleasure. Cannot wait till we get to work together again. Please be safe. In the weeks leading up to our returning back to the classrooms. I want you and your family to have a wonderful, peaceful rest and holiday, however you decide to celebrate it. I will see you soon again my brother. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you, Shawn. My best to you and your loved ones. Take care. Bye-bye.