[applause] to his right is jonathan metzell who has written "the protest psychosis: how schizophrenia became a black disease." [applause] and last but not least to his right, harriet washington whose book, "deadly monopolies: the shocking corporate takeover of life itself and the consequences for your health and our medical future." please give her a welcome. [applause] so i'm going to start the conversation among us by first asking what mythologies did we all learn from writing our books that we would want to share with the audience today and discuss amongst ourselves? i'm going to start with three myths that i learned from writing "genetic justice" which was really about forensic dna. you know, when you watch all these crime programs on tv, dna rules, it seems. so these are the three myths that i learned. first of all, myth number one, that dna profiles are like fingerprints. not true. very different. myth number two is that dna evidence is infallible. also not true. it's not infallible for prosecutions, and it's not infallible for exonerations. myth number three, clerking dna profi