Following this, he describes the Nazis as men who had supported a failed ideology and recalls his early years in Austria that was full of “broken men” who had come back from the war, and that these idols the neo-Nazis look up to “spent the rest of their lives living in shame. And right now, they are resting in hell.”

Schwarzenegger ends the video with a plea to the hate groups operating in the United States to choose a life that is not hateful and to invest their freedom in “something good” instead. To those who claim to have merely been “hanging out” in the rally, he says, “Go home. Or better yet, tell them they are wrong to celebrate an ideology that murdered millions of people. And then go home.”

The video comes across as an attempt at damage control after the flak that Trump has received in the past few days for asking the anti-hate protesters to share the blame with the neo-Nazis at Charlottesville.