Stephon Clark! Say his name. Stephon Clark! Don’t shoot! Hands up! Don’t shoot! It was James Baldwin, who said, “To be black in America and to be relatively conscious, is to be in a rage almost all the time.” My question is, Why aren’t all people? [National anthem] How could you stand for the national anthem of a nation that preaches and propagates freedom and justice for all, that is so unjust to so many of the people living there. How could you not be in a rage when you know that you are always at risk of death in the streets, or enslavement in the prison system? How can you willingly be blind to the truth of systemic racialized injustice? What exactly are you kneeling for and why have you chosen the flag and the anthem to do it? We know that some of you don’t like the country or want to get a point across, but this is the wrong forum. People sometimes forget that love is at the root of our resistance. I’ve realized that our love that sometimes manifests itself as black rage is a beautiful form of defiance against a system that seeks to suppress our humanity. A system that wants us to hate ourselves. But I remind you, it is love that is at the root of our resistance. It is our love for 12-year-old Tamir Rice, who was gunned down by the police in less than two seconds. That will not allow us to bury our anger. It is our love for Philando Castile, who was executed in front of his partner and his daughter. That keeps us fighting back. [gunfire] It is our love for Stephon Clark, who was lynched in his grandma’s back yard. That will not allow us to stop until we liberate our people. Again, love is at the root of our resistance.