Really, from the bottom of my heart, I just want to say thank you for your great work, your courage, and for being available to women who are in desperate situations, such as women from Yemen or the Yazidi women who have been mentioned. I want to thank you very much for the good work you do.
You mentioned, and I agree with you totally, that one of the most important work is to support and fund local women's organizations, to make sure they're building bench strength—to use a sports metaphor—in the local area, to have change happen.
You know, the worldwide web is a great tool for good and a great tool for evil, and there are all kinds of demeaning material on the web. I don't need to go through the litany of it, but I find that some of the disturbing discussions I have with young men result from material they've seen on the web from which they come up with presuppositions about how women should be treated.
Whether in your group or others, is there a strategy to address this? Of course, for anything criminal, obviously, it's a matter of raising awareness of that with law enforcement, but is there a strategy to monitor it, name and shame, or re-educate, so that these things don't have the power that the worldwide web can give them?