and it's not lost onon me that evevery single p person who told their story about t harvey weinstein talked about how they were silenced, how they were encouraged not to speak up, how they were embarrassed or ashamed to speak up. anand so the power o of this movement of ""me too," this s pr of empathy, this power of connection, is really aboutt empowering peoeople to be survivors, to be resilient, and also to make really visible that sexual violence is not about people's individual actions, that this is a systemic problem that then requires different types of responses to deal with how systemic this problem actually is. juan gonzalez: i'd like to ask tarana, as the founder of this movement, where do you think it needs to go, from here on? tarana bururke: so, the movevem, the wowork that i'm doing and ts movementnt is really abobout survivors talking to survivors, right? "me too" is about letting -- using the power of empathy to stomp out shame. and so, we need to keep talking about it, right? it doesn't need to be -- i mean, i appreciate the hashtag, and i appreciate the hashtag elev