. >> john schuchardt: it doesn't start so much as with a movement of thinking as a movement of the heart. the young people who saw segregated lunch counters in greensboro, north carolina in 1960, those four students ignited a movement that ultimately involved hundreds and thousands of people, because that movement of the heart, touched the hearts of others. >> david harris: the initial preface of that revolution has to be a simple one. the civil rights movement kind of introduced the whole notion of the possibility of making social change happen. >> tim dechristopher: i think that's part of what my generation lacks, is that we haven't had these tangible examples of what it looks like when people take power and are committed to changing the system. >> john schuchardt: dr. king said if i can get five percent, i can change the situation. i only need 5%. it's never a matter of the majority. it's always a matter of conscience, and conscience only operates through an individual. >> bill moyers: i was impressed with the statement you made in your hearing, your sentencing hearing. you said, "i s