I'll refer you to the colonizers of Europe who created that map.
Quite seriously, it's something that we are trying to work on, but to do that sort of thing, you have to work locally, very locally. In South Sudan, for instance, a horrible place on this planet, we're working locally—I mentioned churches earlier, for instance—with churches and women's groups to get people of different clans or other self-identification to learn how to share natural resources, for instance, or to jointly come to the training that we provide, that we subsidize, that we finance through our organizations. Sometimes being side by side and learning things together will improve all of their well-being. You also unite in a peace conference, but you create a foundation that is part of it.
We especially focus on youth as well, because let's face it, the countries we're talking about are essentially led by male gerontocracies. By working increasingly, as we are, with young people, we are also trying to work at a new start, in effect, that will go in that direction, but it's going to take a lot of time.