Acharya Prashant responds to a question from a man in the US who, inspired by a verse from the Shrimad Bhagavad Gita, is contemplating whether to join protests against racial injustice. The speaker acknowledges that the matter is nuanced. He affirms that the killing of the man was barbaric, gruesome, and that no person, regardless of race, color, ethnicity, gender, or age, deserves such a death. He considers it a great and heartening thing that people are coming out to protest against a system that perpetuates such atrocities, and that these concerns are cutting across national and ethnic lines. He shudders to think of a society where such events would go unnoticed or unsympathized. However, the speaker urges that this activism must gain depth. He cautions against protests being driven purely by dramatic emotionality and limited to a single cause. Using the protestors' slogan, "We all bleed red," he argues that this feeling of shared suffering must be extended to its logical conclusion. He points out the hypocrisy of a society that protests one injustice while being the biggest murderer of animals in history, asking if the blood of animals is not also red. He also highlights other systemic injustices, such as deaths from poverty and disease, which are not natural. Acharya Prashant warns that protesting a single cause can become an exercise in self-righteousness, where protestors feel they are on the right side of justice while being complicit in other forms of violence and injustice. He connects this to a culture of pleasure, where one person's pleasure often comes at the cost of another's life, and ultimately their own. He concludes that true activism must embrace all injustices everywhere. The definition of justice and the scope of sympathy must be expanded to include all conscious beings. The protest must gain depth and lead to introspection among the protestors themselves.