 Don't worry about North Korea, you can't go to the fucking corner store. I'm safe now. I'm in the safe zone. So are you guys filming for anything specific or just- This is a public access. Oh cool. I keep calling people who might look like you but aren't actually you. Good luck today. You guys are good. Yeah. You gonna be good? No. Sure. It doesn't take a face of this. This might make the history of the world. I like the classic of the old school. Fast forward to 2017. You're gonna open the history book ten years from now and see all of you diverse being dragged out for the cause. Be peaceful. It's so insane. We all got families. They got families. Me hurting them or you hurting them. You don't want to make the cars go away anymore. You're gonna radicalize someone else. Didn't we learn anything from the world we got going on across the fucking ocean? They're screaming shame now with somebody who's walking by with maybe an American flag, a violent, leftist, antifa group, mob, anybody who walked through this crowd over here. I'm gonna show you. Whenever they see someone that looks like a concern or something like that, you'll see them start screaming shame and run over and mob people in large groups over here and start attacking. One lady walked up in here. You want to be hard? Be hard. But you swing at each other? What's that? What's hate? You don't know me. I don't know you. But I'm out here trying to stand and bring everybody together. Unity. Many, many people coming together in unity against fascism and against white supremacy. We were up in the balcony where the Shaw Memorial is. We only came down here at the very end because we couldn't have the flag bulls on the column during the event. Boston and Massachusetts and New England comes together to fight and say no to white supremacy, to say no to anti-Semitism, to say no to the KKK and quite frankly also to say no to the politics of President Trump. It was good just to see a lot of people. The Nazis, that's a small section of this country and it's good for other people to come out and say no. A lot of us don't think this way. We actually want to move this country further, further better. The idea is that hopefully coming together on this side of the fence we can reinforce each other and give us the confidence to go back into our own lives and to, when we're not in those ego chambers of Facebook or Twitter where we're talking to people with the same ideologies, we have the confidence to be able to say, hey look, this is wrong, this is why it's wrong and educate ourselves based on those perspectives we've been able to take away from other people that we've met here. I think that's hopefully the next step for everybody on this side of the fence. Very nice. I'm very inspired that so many people came together in unity against hate and bigotry and neo-Naziism and KKKism and ethno-nationalism and all the other fucking crap. We have to realize what's really going on. We're just being treated as cattle and we have to take our power back. Nothing is meant for us to benefit. Everything is for their benefit to carry out their agenda, whatever that is. It's not what ours is. You see, ours is peace and love and prosperity. I'm from the Boston Common in Boston, Massachusetts, here at the counter protest, the corner of Tremont and West. We're at the lingering after effects of the counter protest to the free speech rally that was planned to go on earlier today and was cut a little bit short. We're here talking to people in the crowd and just getting a feel for how things are playing out on this muggy August day in Boston. I don't want to have fun when everybody has another color. I'm a mutt. I'm a mess of every color. I have black meat. I have white meat, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Russian, German. My grandparents are like rabbits. They were horny bastards. So am I. My father used to have it in the 60s. He was a hippie. He used to go to Woodstock. I went to Woodstock in the 90s. This is wonderful. This is wonderful. Boston is spoken. Boston is spoken. Are you a Boston resident? Yes, I am. We are setting a great example for the rest of the country. Yeah. We're setting a great example. And that's important. I think one of the most significant things is the protest was a reaction to the speakers. And the speakers never spoke. They left without delivering their message. Because they underestimated the solidarity of Boston. I'm a Unitarian Universalist clergy person. And I believe that none of us are free until we're all free. And that white supremacy is violent and killing the people that I know and love. And we as religious people have broken promises many times. And have stood on the side of white supremacy many times. And it's time that we keep our promises and fight for liberation. I'm gonna let no hatreds into our city, into our state. It's unified love only. Boston strong. What's your name? My name's Dominic, man. Lewis, man. I'm from the Dorchester relative, man. I'm from Boston all my life, man. I'm gonna fight for these streets every day I live. How many times did you get this? I left work. I told my boss. I said I got an hour, sir. I got here at one o'clock. I thought I missed it. But I made sure I came for the best time.