so, you know, i'd give an example of a voter like gwendolyn farrington. i think some of the individual voters bring to light the uncontested numerical, socioeconomic and disparate use testimony. she's a voter who works six days a week, 12 hours a day. she had voted early in 2008 and 2012. she didn't have time to vote early during the compressed early voting period in 2014. she voted near her workplace because she worked on election day from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., and she couldn't have gotten to her correct polling place in the time allotted because she had to pick up her adult children like 27 percent of african-americans, three times higher than whites. there are transportation difficulties in her family where multiple adults rely on one car. you see, you know, the same example of carolyn cunningham and the ways in which the burdens in this case are cumulative. she was a first-time voter who used souls to the polls in a prior election. he works throe jobs to make ends -- three jobs to make ends meet. on election day she didn't know where her polling place was