During the documentary, he pays a visit to Baltimore where he sits down with a pair of Black Lives Matter Activists—Kwame Rose, a 21-year-old college dropout who famously called out Geraldo Rivera on national television, and Tariq Toure, a poet and writer. Both are influential community organizers and activists who played sizeable roles in their city's protests following the death of Freddie Gray while in police custody.
In the film, the trio sat down at a Baltimore bar for a chat. Thing get heated when the two young men question why Davis has spent the past thirty years trying to get white people to overcome their racism instead of helping his own people.
”What does that do for people?" Rose asks of Davis in the film. ”Infiltrating the Klan ain't freeing your people." He added, ”Befriending a white person who doesn't have to go through the struggles of you, me... that's not an accomplishment. That's a new friend. That's somebody you can call."
”And this is coming from a dropout," Davis shoots back, condescendingly.
”You don't tell Steve Jobs he ain't successful. He don't have no college degree. Bill Gates ain't got no college degree," Rose replies. ”Neither does Monica Lewinsky," says Davis. ”OK, shit, and what?" Rose says. ”She's giving blowjobs in the White House and doing whatever she was doing..." ”...Well, maybe you could give Obama a blowjob and make a lot of money, too," interrupts Davis.