 I can't breathe! I can't breathe! I can't breathe! I can't breathe! I can't breathe! I can't breathe! Like, what else does everybody say? Everybody knows what's going on. It needs to be stopped. People are dying. Black people are dying. Everybody is dying, fam. For nine minutes. I know it's been raining out here, but we're already wet. We're standing for something, right? Yes. We're standing for together and we're going to do this all together. We're here tonight. That was a brilliant idea, so we will do this for nine minutes. Way down. I have a lot of family that's after this. Every time you see something on the news, you just kind of put yourself in that place. That could be me. That could be my family. That could be my brother. There's something like this. It's really powerful. When you're out here with your people, the emotion is a real problem. There's millions of instances that happen. You know, across the country. There's social injustice, racial abuse, you know, and whatever we can do to kind of bring that to light. We have to take our part. I don't feel like that was the right thing to do. He told me earlier I was going to be back out here in a sense doing this, and I just felt like in a sense, I mean, I had to come out here and try to peacefully protest. Try to do it a better way than what they did last night. I mean, I feel the issue. I mean, it's real life to me. When I get pushed over in the car, I mean, I don't know, can't nobody in this country right now tell me 100% that I'm going to be safe leaving the traffic stop, and I've done nothing wrong. That's why I had to come out here. I needed to support the silence, and I was here last night protesting with everybody. Being out here, I felt the emotions, the feelings, the scare with the police, you know, and I felt like, you know, it's enough being silent. You've got to take action. There's no future without action. You sit behind the phone all day, it's not going to make a difference. You've got to come out here and let your voice be heard because that's the only thing that matters right now. Oh! At the end of the day, it's all love all around, whether you're Asian, black, brown, white, purple, it'll matter. It's all love. We're all human. He loves all of us. I'm a father. I have a nine-year-old little boy, right? It is my responsibility as a father to set an example. I wouldn't tell him if I could tell him what to do, but he's going to do as I do, not as I say. So, I'm out here speaking for the people that have dealt with oppression in their entire lives. I'm from Laredo, Texas. I experienced racism here in high school. I went to high school to learn about sex and experience racism. I've been oppressed slightly. I don't know what it's like to be African-American, but I can be here to speak because I have a voice and a right to speak. I'm going to scream George Floyd and my responsibility is information and the age of information. Ignorance is a choice. I will not be ignorant. We have to educate ourselves. We have to get involved in our community. We have to be close to our police officers because our police officers, they care about us. They want to take care of the community. They're going to protect us. We work side by side with them tonight. We saw that they were guiding us down a street on their bicycles, but I was showing love. We're here to show love.