Portland Trail Blazers star Damian Lillard is a big proponent of the Black Lives Matter movement that has taken center stage amid the ongoing protests, riots, and meaningful conversations happening to spark institutional change.

The use of cameras and technology have greatly aided the exposure of racism and police brutality, but the Blazers point guard doesn't cite that as the reason why this uprise has become more significant now than in previous times:

“I don’t think systemic racism was exposed more this time than in recent years. I just think we as Black people have had enough of the bulls**t. We’ve reached that breaking point,” Lillard told Vanity Fair. “Our ancestors dealt with inequality, slavery, segregation, lynching, etc., and now we have so many instances where what we knew existed is in our faces on camera, and there are never any repercussions or remorse shown. It’s always “justified” somehow.”

Lillard then seared into how African Americans and those involved in the cause can start to enact some change in society:

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“As far as real change, I think the unity being shown across the nation and in other countries is delivering a strong message and applying true pressure,” he said. “There are also more people in search of ways to take true action toward change and not just be a part of the outcry. So I think now, more than any other time, we are moving in the direction of change.”

Lillard has been outspoken about the systemic racism and the police brutality that plague the nation, but h has also made plenty of contributions to his community back in his hometown of Oakland, as well as his resident city of Portland.

He dropped a new spoken-word track “Blacklist” and has another new track in the works, hoping to combat a disease that has long plagued the United States and other parts of the world.