I was just going to add that one of the global challenges is fundamentalisms, and I say it with an āsā because there are multiple forms of fundamentalism.
When I was working and researching a book a couple of years ago that included and documented stories of women human rights defenders, one of the stories was about a woman defender of Moroccan origin living in France, who was trying to tackle an issue or trend that we're seeing globally of young men being more reactionary on women's rights than some of the older men. She had lost a son who had been recruited as a terrorist and she was going to schools in France and speaking to young people not only about her loss, but also about the role of young men and what masculinity should be. She was very powerful because she was speaking from a place of loss, from having lost her son and using that personal experience to reach out to others. Again, it's because she understands the context and the vulnerability, the poverty, that they come from, the vulnerability that these young men experience. She is from those communities where young men are being targeted for such activity.
Again, to reinforce Beth's point with that example, just today I read that two-thirds of Afghan men oppose women's rights, but if you look at the trend, it's the older men who are more flexible on that point and more willing to consider women's rights to be something of value, as opposed to the younger men in Afghanistan.
Again, I think those are the kinds of things that women's rights organizations on the ground would know better than we would of where the pressure points are to address those issues.