Millbank convey this through the nameless narrator, a female teenager who confronts the group of drunk men “without a thought” due to her “rage”. She represents the part in society which has “no lack of resistance” and is able to oppose wrongdoers instead of “pretending” that they do not notice. In comparison, “The Pedestrian” expresses this through resistance against the deprivation of humane qualities through the protagonist, Mr Mead, who represented life in a world consumed by technology. Mr Mead felt “alone in this world” overwhelmed by technology as he have never encounter “another person” who would walk “for air” and “to see” as he does. Bradbury has used the character of Mr Mead to portray those in touch with their humane aspects, exempting themselves from those submerged under the control of technology. “My Country” and “The Pedestrian” both convey the resistance against the wrong as a humane aspect in different ways which allow audience to understand reasoning for people’s opposition against matter that disagree with their