ohio residents fred harris and his grandson darius harris first spoke ten months ago with steve goldbloom, the creator of the brief but spectacular series. here now is his conversation with them, about how they're viewing this critical choice. >> i'm sitting next to my grandfather, frederick harris. >> i'm sitting next to my dear grandson, darius harris. i grew up in the '50s and '60s we fought, we fought the civil rights movement, mississippi, alabama, georgia, the deep south. when i was a little boy, eight, nine, 10 years old, when we would go downtown and my mother wanted to use the bathroom, she had to go downstairs in the courthouse in a dungeon in the basement. and i couldn't understand why can't my mother use the bathroom? see, these are the kinds of things that made me angry. and when i did go into the military and i had time to spend in mississippi and alabama and georgia, i seen a different type of racism and that racism was right in your face. i seen people get beat. i seen him get dogs sicked on him and i said, why? i was angry, i was embarrassed, i was hurt. i still carry tha