I think that I and my colleagues have both, as you know, spoken to that.
Sex education that's consent based is critical, and that talks about pleasure and joy in addition to responsibility and sharing at a very early age. My standard programs, which are being initiated across the country, are showing young men and young women what they can do, how they can get involved in what they see happening without putting themselves directly in harm's way.
As for education, I think that we need to look at our universities and our colleges. One thing that I would suggest and that I'm working on currently is modules—say three or four classes—that are dropped into the existing curriculum in law, in journalism, in health care practice, in religious studies, in humanities, and in social work. All of these people deal with sexual assaults; they're all first-liners in different ways. None of them, including lawyers, have any background education about the crime.
That's one or two or three....