Anti-Trump protests have spilled onto city streets for the fourth straight day. And as NY1's Erin Clarke tells us some of those protestors are beginning young.

Among the hundreds at Union Square protesting a Trump presidency Saturday, there were two little ones.

"One of the reasons I don't like Donald Trump is because he lies and he wants to build a wall which separates our country from Mexico and a lot of my friends are Mexican and I think he might start segregation again," said protester Henry Grace.

"Donald Trump," said his sister Anika. "He doesn't believe in global warming."

Anika and Henry Grace joined their mother Gerd for the second day in-a-row at protests that have popped up throughout the city since the Presidential election Tuesday.

"We went to Washington Square yesterday," Gerd Grace said. "We're here today and we're going to keep coming to any kind of activist movements that we can come with them."

For Anika and Henry, their mother says it's an early lesson in civics.

Grace says her children's interest in the election was sparked by the chance that a woman could become president of the United States.

They watched the news with her throughout the campaign and ultimately made a decision all their own.

Saturday, they carried handmade signs expressing their feelings.

"They really heard a lot about what he does and, so I felt that as a parent it was nice for them to be able to hear a lot and not shelter them too much," Grace said.

Though some of the President-elect's rhetoric during the campaign wasn't exactly appropriate for children and neither are some of the things being said and done at rallies across the country where there's been violence and people arrested.

Grace is encouraging her children to practice peaceful protest, learn more about the way government works and even plans to introduce them to the American Civil Liberties Union.

"I think it's nice for children to see how the world works and sometimes the world's a little scary, but I don't mind that my kids see that a little bit because I worry that if they grew up and they haven't heard or seen anything, they become less empowered," Grace said.