loss of privacy, the normalization of this open relationship to the world, which not in a good way necessarily, and this hyperconnectivity, the challenge that parents have to be present with their kids because they're constantly being sucked away by their device. I think that's what the 2000s is. I think it'll be remembered for the first decade of real change in norms, the Me Too movement, this renewed attention around the disproportionate murder of black men versus white men, racial injustice, prison, drugs. I mean, there's a lot of change happening. And I think the optimist in me says, this is great. I mean, some of it sucks while it's happening, but it's great in that it's causing us to have to come to terms with these changing realities. I mean, the Me Too movement is a reflection of the empowerment of women. They're making more money. They're demanding more power in society. And I think that's fair. I mean, it's not for me to say it's fair, but makes sense to me. The issue is, how (29/32)
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