It's fundamental.
To those who are not acting while listening to all that has gone on, what is blocking that action? To listen to what athletes have been speaking about with compassionate ears, with wisdom; to look at things from an empathetic perspective; to discern what is going through a very complex situation takes leadership. It takes moral leadership. It takes compass points. It takes courage.
What is holding that decision back, what fears? When people are shedding tears and have been harmed, not to do something about it immediately is also part of the problem.
My fundamental question, as these organizations are doing all of this, is, “Who has the oversight for them, and therefore, what is blocking the ability to take action?” I don't think that the people who got into this problem are the people who are going to fix it. It's going to take a transformative situation—values-based—to first understand what the purpose of sport is and to always come back to the fundamentals, but I think that fear is holding a lot of this back.