►
Description
Felicia Pendleton testifies before City Council's Committee on Public Safety during hearings on gun violence held March 28, 2016 at City Hall.
Pendleton's 20 year old son Jayvon Mitchell-Pendleton was slain on March 2 near 23rd Street and Lehigh Avenue.
During the hearing, Pendleton, as well as representatives from city agencies, nonprofits, and members of law enforcement were invited to give testimony and recommendations on addressing the problems of gun violence in the City.
www.phlcouncil.com
A
B
B
If
curfew,
what
was
in
place
that
wouldn't
be
an
issue
if
truancy
would
be
in
it
was
in
place,
it
wouldn't
be
an
issue.
They
stopped
the
truancy
act
when
or
when
all
of
the
kids
acting
all
crazy
in
Center
City
with
the
flash
mobs
and
stuff
or
they
was
going.
There
truancy
thing
heavy,
but
once
they
ceased
the
slowdown,
it
stopped
curfew,
who's
on
curfew,
weird
these
parents,
don't
even
know
where
these
children
are
a
this
kid
was
15
years
old
and
what
we
mean
by
crash
dummies.
B
B
B
Who
who
are
you
in
who
house
are
you
in
what
address?
Are
you?
Are
you
a
because
if
anything
was
to
happen
to
you,
I
need
to
know
where
you
a
make
sure
you
keep
your
drug
your
non
driver's
license
on
you,
your
identification
on
you,
but
some
of
these
young
folks.
They
they
don't
realize
that
some
of
these
kids
are
so
cold-hearted.
B
Then
they're
going
to
these
older
folks
because
of
the
crash
dummy
system,
because
they
feel
like
they
don't
have
anyone.
A
lot
of
these
kids
has
dropped
out
of
the
8th
grade.
They
feel
like
they
don't
have
nobody,
no
resources
and
no
one
can
help
them.
It
should
be
help
for
them
because
they
feel
like
I'm,
not
in
school.
I
dropped
out
of
the
8th
grade
now
that
I'm
18
19
years,
oh
I,
have
no
education.
I
have
nothing
else
to
do,
but
go
to
the
streets
and
I've
heard
all
of
these
programs.
B
That's
out
here
is
the
first
time
I'm
hearing
of
any
of
these
programs.
The
only
time
I
hear
about
stuff
is
when
election
time
is
coming
up.
I
don't
even
know
who
my
study
cancelled.
Man
is
in
my
neighborhood
and
I
live
20
to
25
North
Lambor
Street
I
have
not
seen
my
city
councilperson
I
have
not
heard
from
my
set
of
cancer
person.
I
have
not
witnessed
who
he
is
unless
I
see
him
or
the
news
backing
up.
B
Another
political
person
don't
come,
knocking
on
my
door
playing
letters
in
my
door
on
my
car
during
election
time.
If
you
can't
help
me
or
help
these
children
is
out
here
and
my
son
done
been
murdered
by
a
15
year
old
and
a
20
year
old.
That
makes
absolutely
no
sense
to
me
now.
I
have
a
group
of
young
men,
my
son
friends,
my
son's
friends
is
a
group
of
five
of
them.
They're
basically
saying
this
one
house,
no
adult
chaperones
but
they're,
trying
to
work
they're
trying
to
go
to
school
one
of
them.
B
One
of
them
was
actually
with
my
when
a
situation
happened,
but
he's
been
been
treated
as
he
was
the
murderer
himself
when
they
have
the
murderers
on
camera.
Why
is
he
being
treated
as
he
was?
The
one
that
committed
the
murders
himself
kicked
his
door
in
so
all
of
the
young
men
in
the
neighborhood
know
that
his
door
was
kicked
in,
so
he
obviously
snitched.
B
So
how
was
he
supposed
to
go
back
to
the
community
where
he
lives
and
people
are
looking
at
him?
Like?
Oh
he's,
a
wreck,
he
snitched
and
I
was
dealing
around
house.
This
young
man
didn't
say
a
word
out
of
his
mouth,
but
these
young
men
don't
know
that,
but
because
his
board
was
kicked
in
and
he
was
sucking
down.
Oh
he
done
told
somebody
something
because
there's
these
young
men
is
incarcerating
them
right.
Now
all
I'm
asking
for
help
these
young
men,
my
son
friends,
help
them.
B
They
don't
know
none
of
these
programs
as
out
of
here.
None
of
these
programs
that
I've
even
heard
today
I've
helped
my
son
by
myself,
my
son
graduated
from
a
motet.
He
played
football
for,
and
lo
said,
my
son
was
an
active,
Stewart
and
Cheney
University
and
was
actually
filling
out
scholarship
papers
to
take
summer
programs
in
the
Cheney
University
summer
courses
in
Philly,
instead
of
traveling
all
the
way
out
of
the
camera.
B
We
need
to
wish
in
hell
for
somebody's
everybody,
don't
have
high
SAT
scores,
everybody
don't
have
high
GPAs,
but
they
want
to
be
in
school
and
they
should
be
able
to
be
in
school
without
have
from
the
worrying
about
financial
issues,
but
they
don't.
These
resources
is
not
made
available
to
them.
At
all,
I
talked
to
my
son
friends.
They
come
to
my
house.
They
respect
me.
I
told
them
that
my
son
free
no
do
not
come
with
t-shirts
and
do
not
come
with
it
easily.
B
B
They
feel
like
they
don't
have
an
honest
chance,
because
one
right
now
they're
angry
be
angry
for
what
happened
to
my
son.
I
am
angry
for
what
happened
to
my
son,
but
if
we
don't
get
to
these
young
men
right
now
and
there
wasn't
help
right
now
that
anger
will
turn
into
something
else
and
that's
not
what
we
want,
because
it
just
be
another
statistic
or
another
murder.
B
B
If
somebody
said
that
my
son
was
doing
this,
then
now
I
know
what
I
people
a
neighborhood
I'm
coming
to
get
you
and
it
may
not
seem
like
something
to
y'all
bad.
My
son
is
6
4
I'm,
411
I'm,
coming
with
a
baseball
bat
cuz,
you
getting
your
behind
in
my
car
and
I'm.
Getting
you
out
of
this
circumstance
right
now,
but
live
these
kids.
They
don't
have
mothers,
like
me,
they're
actually
out
here,
fending
for
themselves,
they're
trying
to
take
care
of
yourself
they're
trying
to
maintain
for
themselves.
B
They
know
nothing
about
no
programs,
that's
out
here
when
I
say
some
of
them
has
some
of
these
kids.
That
I
know
not
my
son
friends
love
my
son
friends,
hairs
they've
graduated
that
some
of
them
have
high
GPAs.
They
don't
have
the
guidance
or
the
tools
to
move
forward
in
their
lives
and,
like
I,
said
right
now,
I'm,
deep
angry,
and
if
we
don't
get
to
these
kids
right
now,
listen
I'm,
ready
to
mentor.
You
right
now
today,
I'm
here
to
help
you
right
now.
Today
you
need
as
a
maid,
writing.
B
I
have
a
place
for
this.
Somebody
will
stand
here
with
you,
because
her
mom
has
never
written
a
resume
and
day
in
your
life.
So
they
don't
know
what
comes
along
with
a
resume.
They
need
somebody.
It's
a
lot
of
city
officials.
There
was
a
lot
of
minute
boom.
We
have
a
line
young
folks
out
here
that
need
a
lot
of
these
city
officials
and
grown
folks.
Any
lies
because
somebody
has
found
us
is
not
you
see
who's
here,
mom
mothers,
that's
all
y'all!
That's
all
we
really
have
is
mothers.
B
B
A
You
pointed
out
some
things:
I
don't
want
to
ask
you
a
couple
of
questions.
Number
one
I
acknowledge
you
come
from
a
strong
female,
collective
family,
yes,
and
that
there
seems
to
be
absence
of
men.
Yes,
when
we
went
to
your
house
to
to
offer
our
condolences
some
of
the
guys
on
the
corner
asked,
are
you
a
cop?
Are
you
a
preacher?
A
A
But
the
point
is
we
need
to
have
more
of
us
these
examples
to
them
a
couple
of
things
you
mentioned:
truancy,
yes,
and
that
that
is
a
problem.
It's
something
that
we
can
take
away
from
today
and
say
that
we
need
to
fund
more
truancy,
anteater
on
see
efforts,
keep
them
off
the
streets,
keep
them
in
classrooms
where
they
belong.
You
talked
about
curfew.
Yes,
we
need
to
start
to
pay
attention
to
that,
not
just
on
Chestnut
Street,
yes,
but
on
chat-los
Street,
yes,
I.
A
A
Also
talked
about
young
people
raising
their
own,
yes
household
of
five
individuals
that
have
no
adult
supervision
and
they
get
recruited
into
the
crash
dummy
system.
If
we're
talking
about
holistic
programs
and
Community
Schools
below,
we
got
to
reach
out
and
figure
out
in
advance
of
a
murder
where
these
high-risk
young
people
are
and
get
help
too.
What
I
hear
is
a
lot
of
programs
up
here,
but
if
we
don't
translate
that
down
to
the
real
world
where
they
are,
there's
a
disconnect,
you
talked
about
also
jobs.
A
That
what
these
folks
really
want,
not
a
handout,
they
want
some
out
exactly
so
I
heard
you
I
wanted
all
of
you
to
hear
it
is
so
as
we
go
through
our
budget
process.
Everything
that
we
do
should
be
to
that
in
whether
we
talk
about
increased
funding
for
education,
whether
we
talk
about
suicide
prevention,
because
there's
mental
health
issues
involved
here
we
talked
about
trauma
teachers.
Talk
about
that.
You
needed
a
trauma
team
that
come
out
and
deal
with
it.
There
was
none
there.
B
Was
none
Lamaze
when
I
found
out
my
son
was
shot
when
I
got
to
the
hospital.
I
was
just
in
his
room
by
myself.
They
wouldn't
even
let
my
family,
maybe
one
or
two
people
come
in
to
home.
With
me,
I'm
crying
out
of
my
mind.
Nobody
from
the
hospital
would
talk
to
me.
No
police
officers
will
come
and
talk
to
me
I'm
just
sitting
I'm
waiting
to
hear
that
my
son
is
dead,
no
help
whatsoever
and
it
took
a
lot
out
of
me
I'm
a
broken
mother
right
now.
B
B
Mom
I
will
be
graduating
from
college
before
I
turn
26
mom
I'm
going
to
marry
my
girlfriend,
which
is
his
college.
They
all
go
to
college
together
at
26,
I'm
gonna
move
you
out
this
neighborhood
at
26
mom,
the
age
of
26
that
was
his
target
number
and
and
I.
Don't
wanna
I
don't
want
to
make
thing
like
my
son
was
this
goody-two-shoes
because
my
son
come
from
a
behavior
help
situation?
My
son
was
diagnosed
with
ADHD.
My
son
was
diagnosed
with
bipolar,
but
I
never
gave
up
on
him.
B
I
was
that
one
mother
that
went
on
every
single
school
trip
from
pre-k
to
high
school,
with
my
son
and
he's
20
years
old
I
was
never
going
to
allow
my
son
to
become
a
victim
of
his
circumstances.
It
wasn't
happening
on
my
watch.
You
acting
up
in
school
I
made
the
school
I
stopped
working
at
my
job
to
be
more
of
a
productive
parent.
With
my
son,
I
made
I
fought
for
mental
health
services
for
my
son.
B
It
wasn't
nothing
or
we
have
these
services
here
for
you
or
we
have
these
services
here
for
me,
and
I
knew
nothing
about
mental
services
until
I
had
to
do
it.
With
my
son,
I
figured
these
things
out
on
my
own,
and
my
son
turned
out
to
be
the
man
that
I
groomed
him
to
be
the
man
that
I
wanted
him
to
be.
He
overcame
so
much
people
from
back
then
would
never
think
that
Javon
is
who
he
is
today.
B
So
you
we
can't
just
say
you
know
the
mental
health,
the
mental
health,
the
mental
health,
because
they
can
overcome
anything
as
if
my
son
did
I
kept.
My
son
active
in
baseball
football
people
didn't
know
that
my
son
played
chess
and
was
very
good
at
good
chess
player.
He
played
for
the
South
Philly
sharks,
since
he
was
an
age
of
11
years
old.
B
Then,
when
he
moved
over
to
North
Philly,
he
played
for
a
motet
football
team
where
he
graduated
from
he
recruited
to
play
for
Chaney
high
school,
but
when
he
got
there,
he
was
like
mom
I
just
want
to
focus
on
school
and
I
told
him
I
said
Avon.
If
this
is
what
you
want
to
do,
this
is
what
you
want
to
do,
I'm
all
for
your
in
school.
That's
where
you
wanted
to
be.
Nobody
forced
him
to
be
there.
He
made
it.
B
He
would
be
like
my
mom
I'm,
going
to
the
second
sieve
office
to
talk
to
them.
If
he
had
issues
I'm
going
to
the
higher
officials
to
speak
with
them,
but
now
that
my
son
is
gone,
I'm,
not
gonna,
let
his
death
be
in
vain,
because
he
has
some
friends
out
here.
That
needs
help
they're,
not
bad
children.
They
not
drug
dealers,
they
they
don't
need
job
readiness.
They
need
jobs
right
now,
because
if
they
don't
get
jobs
right
now,
they're
gonna
end
up
on
somebody's
corner
selling,
drugs
or
trapping
in
somebody's
Trap
House.
A
Because
we
can
plan
and
think
until
you've
lived
there,
one
other
thing:
I'm
gonna
pass
up
to
Councilman
green,
the
close
proximity
of
the
alleged
perpetrators
and
you
for
us
in
this
room.
We're
not
talking
about
on
the
other
side
of
the
city.
Tell
us
what
we're
dealing
with
while
we
approximately
right.
B
B
We
shared
the
same
larger
mates,
same
schools,
I
went
to
school
one
day,
young
men's
a
mother.
That's
how
close
in
in
proximity
I
am
to
these
people.
No
one
has
picked
up
the
phone
and
said
miss
Pendleton.
Can
we
move
you
and
your
mother
out
of
this
situation
because
we're
full
of
anger
when
we've
I
passed
this
area
we're
full
of
anger?
They
took
my
baby
from
me,
he's
20
years
old
and
he
had
a
plan.
These
young
men
don't
have
no
plan
that
killed.
B
B
They're
right
in
between
nobody,
said
miss
Pendleton.
Do
we
need
to
move
your
family,
or
do
we
need
to
move
your
mother
out
of
this
area
because
of
retaliation
one
some
of
these
social
media
places
Philly
calm
and
some
of
these
plays
I
put
my
address
inside
of
these
papers.
Why
I'm
a
victim?
Why
do
the
2200
block
of
Lambor
Street
has
to
be
as
out
of
these
papers?
B
A
B
Exactly
I
mean
these
people
has
been
on
social
media.
That's
what
the
family
say
and
that's
another
thing.
These
peer
with
some
of
these
pairings
y'all
need
to
start
here
with
the
hell.
Are
these
parents
accountable?
They
need
to
know
what's
going
on
near
children's
social
media
sites,
they
need
to
know
what's
going
on
inside
of
your
homes,
they
could
check
these
homes.
They
need
to
stop
being
afraid
of
these
kids.
My
son
was
6
4940
11.
There
will
never
be
a
time
that
I'll
be
afraid
of
this
kid.
B
Ever
in
my
life,
I'm
mom
all
day
long
all
day
they
on
social
media
s
with
the
family
says
you
know
talking
about
vindication
who
are
you
vindicating?
My
son
is
big.
These.
We
can
still
see
their
children,
they
can
still
talk
to
him.
They
can
still
eat,
send
pictures
or
whatever
I
can't
do
this.
My
son
is
good
Gausman.
A
C
B
C
Dealing
with
this
issue
every
day
and
they're
going
back
and
forth
on
procedures
and
policies
and
I
and
here
to
pain
in
your
voice
and
we're
dealing
with
some
procedural
stuff
that
to
me
at
the
end,
the
day
seems
more
personality,
driven
as
opposed
a
solution
driven,
and
these
are
the
things
that
we
need
to
hear
and
be
reminded
about,
no
matter
if
you're
in
this
seat
or
that
seat
or
some
other
seat
about
the
issue
that
we're
dealing
with
every
day.
You
show
about
the
issue
of
accountability
of
parents.
C
Clearly
you
have
done
that
in
your
life
and
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we
use
tools
like
the
truancy
issue,
because
I'll
apply
adventure,
the
15
year
old
and
a
20
year
old
that,
unfortunately
murdered.
Your
son
probably
had
truancy
issues
in
their
background,
and
so
we've
got
to
get
beyond
the
back-and-forth
of
the
games
of
what
we
can
and
cannot
do
and
what
we
can
do
and
that's
one
of
the
issues
that
I
know
I'll,
be
speaking
about
as
we
go
through
the
budget
process.
C
But
you're
also
talking
about
the
issue
of
jobs,
and
we
talked
about
earlier
today,
both
councilman
Johnson
councilman
Jones,
other
members
of
this
panel
talked
about.
We
cannot
forget
about
the
economic
development
perspective
to
this
issue.
Too
often
we
talk
about
this
from
a
public
safety
perspective,
at
least
now
we're
talking
to
behavioral
health.
But
what
about
the
economic
development
and
jobs?
Opportunity
opportunist
perspective,
and
that's
too
often
we
leave
that
aspect
out
and
we
need
to
make
sure
we
continue
to
hear
about
it.
I'm
this
earlier
today,
before
I
came
to
this
hearing.
C
B
It's
one
thing:
if
you
have
a
GPA
of
a
3.0,
but
it's
another
thing
is:
if
you
don't
have
a
high
GPA,
if
you
don't
have
high
SAT
scores,
but
you're
accepted
in
school,
and
you
want
to
be
in
school
what
about
those
people
that
just
want
to
be
in
school?
They
don't
have
some
of
them.
Don't
even
have
mental
health
issues.
My
son
was
one
of
them.
C
I
and
I
agreed
and
having
a
son,
who's,
15
who's,
autistic
I,
think
Lincoln
and
Cheney's,
and
those
type
of
HBCUs
who
take
the
the
clay
and
they
mold
them
into
a
somewhat
a
3.0
and
I
think
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we
continue
to
do
that
and
provide
opportunity
and
information
to
the
young
people
that
you're
having
a
mentor.
Don't
want
to
do
the
right
thing.
So.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
D
D
Chairman,
Jones
I
think
you
said
something
that
really
moved
me
this
morning
and
I'm
gonna.
Repeat
it
I'm
not
gonna,
do
it
as
eloquently
as
you,
but
it
reached
home
if
10
whales,
swam
up
from
the
Atlantic
Ocean
from
Cape,
May
and
all
of
a
sudden,
got
themselves
a
Penn's
Landing
and
died
the
national
news
media,
they
would.
C
D
Have
a
question
for
you,
but
I
have
a
comment:
I'm
a
newly
elected
councilman
I
was
elected
in
November,
but
I
spent
five
years
here
as
a
staff
assistant
to
Councilwoman,
Joan,
krajewski
and
I
was
chief
of
staff
to
councilman
Jack
Kelly
when
he
was
a
district
member
I've
heard
a
lot
of
testimony.
I've
never
heard
more
and
better
testimony
that
made
more
sense.
The
problem
we
were
discussing
I
commend
you
for
being
here.
Thank.
B
D
The
roles
were
reversed
and
it
was
a
family
member
of
mine.
I.
Do
not
think
that
I
could
find
it
in
my
heart
to
be
anywhere
in
the
public.
The
message
you
have
given
all
of
Philadelphia
should
see
all
of
the
news
media
should
see.
The
nation
should
see
the
news
media
right
now
is
not
here,
but
I
will
tell
you.
This
I
will
tell
you
something
about
council.
D
We
actually
taped
these
hearings
you're
on
video,
and
so
am
I
I'm
gonna
I've
never
done
this,
but
I
want
to
watch
your
testimony
again
because
it's
moving
powerful
and
it's
real
and
my
comment
is:
we
must,
as
human
beings
do
something
to
help
other
human
beings,
this
problem
must
come
to
an
end.
Thank
you
very
much
fairly.
Thank
you
for
your
leadership
of
my
colleagues
as
well.
E
Thank
you.
We
do
have
the
media
documenting
this
particular
hearing,
but
not
the
actual
television
stations
that
you
were
here
earlier
on,
but
I
think
I'm,
the
pressbox.
No,
actually
the
press
box
over
there
are
individuals
representing
the
various
newspapers
documenting
this
okay,
just
just
for
the
record,
but
we
don't
have
the
actual
television
crew,
which
usually
portrays
the
these
acts
of
insolence
incidents
of
violence
on
a
day-to-day
basis.
There
isn't
here
right
now
we
should
be
here.
That's
what
the
my
fellow
councilman
is
alluding.
E
I
think
it's
kind
of
shameful
to
be
quite
frank
with
you
that
from
a
funding
standpoint,
you
aren't
like
a
United
Way
type
of
organization
here
and
we'll
probably
have
to
have
a
frank
conversation
with
the
councilman
on
the
figure
out.
Why
that
isn't
the
case
in
terms
of
your
contracting
opportunities
with
the
various
city
agencies?
That's
actually
going
out
there
and
doing
the
work,
because
I
remember
when
your
program
first
started.
I
was
in
also
I.
E
Remember,
men
United
against
the
better
Philadelphia
before
I,
even
got
involved
as
a
being
elected
official
and
was
also
on
a
ground
going
to
the
neighborhoods,
doing
intervention
being
proactive
reaching
out
to
the
young
men
on
the
corner
and
young.
Ladies
and
a
young
ladies,
because
when
you
look
at
who's
being
arrested
for
I'm
trafficking,
the
guns
young,
ladies,
not
the
young
menace,
you
know
what
you
call
it
crash
dummies
councilman.
Well,
the
crowd.
E
The
other
conversations
with
the
crash
dummies
is
the
young
man
who
has
the
record
that
gets
the
young
lady
the
globe
out,
it
would
go
to
Colosimo,
is
to
buy
out
of
guns
and
for
you
to
go
straw
purchasing
to
go,
carry
the
guns,
and
so
my
just
commend
you,
ladies
on
for
being
the
strength,
but
I
also
call
us
men
out
on
particularly
african-american
men,
because
there's
really
our
role
to
protect
the
women
in
our
community
I
mean
no
disrespect.
Anybody.
B
E
E
We
also
have
I
want
to
put
him
on
the
spot,
but
a
young
man
who
have
uses
his
celebrity
to
step
up
to
the
plate
and
go
on
a
school
store
and
talk
about
on
Redemption
in
his
own
life,
meek,
Millz
who's.
Here
today
we
just
stopped
past
and
talked
about
it
and
now
so
much
to
put
him
on
the
spot,
but
he's
from
that
generation
of
young
people
that
may
even
could
identify
probably
more
than
myself,
which
is
a
you
know,
sometimes
me
a
hard
pill
to
swallow
because
you
know
I
come
from.
E
You
know
a
Tina
Dickinson,
South
Philadelphia
lived
on
one
side
of
the
law
and
changed
changed
my
life
to
be
a
better
man
of
my
community,
but
at
the
end
of
the
day,
I
think
these
hearings
will
help
bring
all
of
us
together
to
begin
looking
at.
How
do
we
use
all
this
power
together
to
kind
of
dress
in
this
issue?
You've
come
but
I.
Thank
you
for
stepping
up
like.
B
The
same
I'm,
one
woman
with
one
small
house
I
invite
five
to
ten
young
men
to
come
to
my
house
and
I
talk
to
these
boys.
All
of
the
time.
Do
you
need
me
to
help
you
with
anything?
Do
you
need
fool?
Do
you
need
something
so
weird?
Even
to
my
son
funeral,
if
you
don't
have
a
button-up
shirt,
I
will
buy
your
button,
I'm
sure,
but
I'm
one
woman
in
one
house:
that's
all
I
can
do
because
my
son
death
is
not
going
to
go
in
vain.
It's
not
going
to
happen.
B
I,
don't
care
if
I
have
to
go
on
these
corners,
that's
what
we
need
people
out.
They
used
to
have
the
Black
Panthers
used
to
come
on
the
corner
and
stuff
like
that.
You
need
to
have
people
coming
in
these
corners
and
let
me
young
folks
know
what's
available
to
them,
because
if
they
only
have
an
eighth
grade
education,
they
don't
know
no
better.
B
They
don't
know
that
they
have
a
job
court
that
they
can
get
into,
or
they
still
can
get
a
job
even
with
four
eighth
grade
education
get
to
these
corners,
don't
know
where
these
Hardy
corners
ain't
got
no
Renee.
It's
all
the
time
we
need
more
men,
Mentors,
listen,
young
fella,
I
am
miss
Felicia,
say
you
trying
to
work.
Let
me
take
you
under
my
wing.
Let
me
show
you:
when
does
enough,
like
a
man
shaking
hands
with
a
man?
Look
at
me
out
of
I
in
my
face
to
show
that
we
respect
each
other.