Conservative-leaning websites are sharing a video showing a UC Riverside student demanding that one of his peers give back his ‘Make America Great Again’ hat that she snatched from his head.

Warning: The video below does include foul language.

On Thursday, Sept. 28, UCR student Matthew Lawrence Vitale posted the video on Facebook. It shows him recording the woman who took the hat to report it to the student life office.

Fox News, Breitbart News and Campus Reform are some of the sites that have covered the incident that occurred at a student organization meeting for those involved with groups on campus.

Another video appears to show the start of the confrontation, uploaded by Edith “Chata” Macias, who is wearing that name tag in Vitale’s video. The video shows the student grabbing the hat and running out of the room. The video is included with a hashtag #snatchahat.

On her Facebook post of the video, Macias posted “You feel safe cuz you got the cops and politicians on your side. Youre not safe… just saying. We need to make racists scared.”

“This represents genocide,” the student said of the hat in Vitale’s video.

She said university officials shouldn’t allow people to wear that hat on campus.

Vitale, who appears to be vice president of the College Republicans at the college, told her in the video that freedom of speech allows him to wear that hat.

“Your freedom of speech is killing a lot of people out there,” she told him.

Toward the end of the video, the student gave officials the hat.

“People like this are what universities across America are putting out into this world,” Vitale said in a separate Facebook post. In that video, Vitale said he did not press charges because he got the hat back. But, the situation has been referred to the Office of Student Conduct.

UC Riverside spokesman John Warren said the university is talking to both students and offering assistance in dealing with this situation.

“The unfortunate incident that was recorded and shared on social media does not conform to UCR’s Principles of Community,” said Warren in an e-mail statement. “Federal privacy laws prevent the University from commenting on student conduct matters but UC Riverside stands by its deep commitment to freedom of expression, civil discourse, and respectful interactions within our community.”