bernice king, welcome to hardtalk. thank you. you are ceo of the king centre in atlanta, georgia. like your late father, martin luther king, you are a church minister, you also preach his message of coexistence. when you look around the world today, including the united states, do you see coexistence between different peoples? you certainly see it in — in various places, when i travel around the nation and the world, but i think holistically we have a lot of work to do in terms of understanding our different cultures, appreciating them, respecting them, and finding a common way to move forward in society. because, you know, we have a society of laws and opportunities. and i think that's where much of the friction lies. so, just looking at the united states, algernon austin, who's an african—american, he wrote a book called america is not post—racial. he says the civil rights movement of the ‘50s and ‘60s, that it failed more than it succeeded. he thinks that you didn't make progress on desegregation. he says "today, in my city, washington, dc, which is more than a third white, the