25,000 Hit The Streets In Massive NYC Anti-Trump Rally Hours Before Inauguration Day

25,000 Hit The Streets In Massive NYC Anti-Trump Rally Hours Before Inauguration Day

The last time Clark Luster marched in New York City was in the 1960s to protest the Vietnam War.

Over half a century later, the 72-year-old retiree from Asheville, North Carolina, says a new threat has compelled him to hit the streets once again: President-elect Donald Trump.

"We've got to do something about him," Luster told The Huffington Post on Thursday. "What's happened since the election ― the appointments of his Cabinet, the incompetence demonstrated during the confirmation hearings, [Trump's] relationship to Russia ― all of these things come together and tell you that we're in a very unsettled and unreasonable time."

Clark Luster, 72, flew from his home in Asheville, N.C. to participate in the We Stand United rally in NYC and the Women's March on Washington.
Clark Luster, 72, flew from his home in Asheville, N.C. to participate in the We Stand United rally in NYC and the Women's March on Washington.
Hayley Miller/HuffPost

Luster is one of 25,000 people, according to event organizers, who flooded the streets surrounding Trump International Hotel and Tower near Central Park during the "We Stand United" rally on the eve of Trump's inauguration.

Filmmaker Michael Moore and New York Mayor Bill de Blasio spoke at the massive anti-Trump demonstration. Other high-profile figures, including actors Robert De Niro, Mark Ruffalo and Cher, joined throngs of individuals and families of all ages and ethnicities.

Queens resident Fiza Deen, who said her father marched fromSelma to Montgomery, Alabama, with Martin Luther King Jr. during the civil rights movement, made her way down Broadway with her 7-year-old daughter, Chloe, carrying a sign that read "No! Stop Trump/Pence."

Queens resident Fiza Deen and her 7-year-old daughter Chloe joined the "We Stand United" rally to speak out against Trump.
Queens resident Fiza Deen and her 7-year-old daughter Chloe joined the "We Stand United" rally to speak out against Trump.
Hayley Miller/HuffPost

"I feel like it's important to speak out for what you believe in," Deen told HuffPost on Thursday. "I don't believe he is a legitimate president, and I think he needs to go."

"I am worried," she said about the Trump administration's potential effects on her daughter. "Racism has become blatant. It's become crazy. I don't know what's going to happen when she gets older."

The "We Stand United" rally near Central Park was organized by environmental advocacy group Greenpeace and liberal activist organization MoveOn.org, as well as several local nonprofits.

Organizers said on the event's Facebook page that they wanted "to stand united and send a message to President-elect Trump and Congress that New York will protect the rights of people and the environment."

De Blasio pledged his attendance in a series of tweets Monday: