Firstly, thank you for sharing your traumatic experience of sexual assault. It's not easy for anyone to be public about something so violating. I'm going to put my experience of actually knowing Paris at one point in my life, and speak from objectivity. Paris's trauma isn't "like ours". I can't help to notice the erasure of Black/Latinx children in residential treatment centers--particularly foster children who end up there. Their trauma too often goes invalidated. Their trauma gets criminalized while, the suburban faces of Breaking Code Silence gets a movement. I'm a survivor of abuse at Pleasantville Cottage School. When I left, my life didn't get better. It took me years to come to terms with what happened to me. I'm considered a "lucky one". I run into the Black/Latinx youth I knew there. Homelessness, incarceration, substance abuse, lifetime of socio-economic hardship, and even death they face. As trauma survivors, we must dismantle the invisible trauma survivor hierarchy--which stems from respectability, racism, classism, and white supremacy. I'm not even going tp touch on what Paris said about women who came forward with accusations of Trump sexually assaulting them, or her lengthy history of racism. She's a survivor and didn't deserve what happened to her, but she still has to be held accountable. I hope you see my feedback as sincere, and not coming from a place of malice. Thank you so much.