w.e.b. du bois led to be in his '90s. they both wrote and work for over six years. first of all, i want to know how they live because i'm trying to live to be 105, like that's my first question. how do you live to be that long as as a black person living in the midst of lynching, living in the aftermath of reconstruction? it's real question. so they do these lifetime schoolwork and the people like we're an amorous of du bois because it shifts and want to document all that. but yet they want you to write the one book about the black woman in it when it's like you're noticing anything is because it already know her. it's like until i write a better for the next hundred years than i have said enough yet, right? part of that is just have to have some boxy and think the black women, professors who trained me train me for this fight. the martha jones of the world, the professor here at baltimore, johns hopkins, these folks trained us to go in it and be prepared for that fight. black men are enamored with this meant because many are like of those men. those men, w.e.b. du