Howdy fam! You know the drill.

I’m at #NoKings in #Seattle today. I’m hoping to do another piece on protest art; and I’ll say, so far I have not been disappointed!

If you see me, don’t be afraid to say hi. I don’t bite (usually)

If I have any live observations (and I already have a few), I’ll thread them here. Heads up to flex that mute button for a few hours it if it’s not your jam!

Highlights so far; whenever I ask anyone what the most impressive art they’ve seen is, they all unanimously point me to one of two places.

The first is a group of that has made a Statue of Liberty costume, which is standing at least twice the height of the folks wielding it. Eavesdropping on the crowd, I can already hear that folks are using them as a meeting landmark. lol!

Second is a stunning hand-made drag ensemble by Patty Trauma. Red white and blue, Trump-evoking makeup, and a cake— of the “let them eat” variety— shaped to resemble a machine, probably an old timey voting machine. It had a strip of “I voted” stickers coming out of it.

No photos for Fedi yet because I haven’t been able to do my usual consent/redaction cleanup, but you bet I did get some.

Here’s an interesting logistical change from last year; today’s main event, which will be held after the march at Seattle Center, is focused on connecting attendees on a per-neighborhood basis to each other.

I think this is a great idea, at least in theory, which seems pointed at the usual “protesting is performative” cynicism.

I’m on my way ahead now to see how that’s going to work.

There have also been some program changes that I didn’t expect. With the exception of AG Nick Brown, who helped open ceremonies at Cal Anderson, I’m told there are no elected official speakers.

According to the Indivisible media folks, this was a “deliberate choice”, although they didn’t elaborate on the criteria.

If I had to wildly speculate (which I don’t, but I will) I imagine that last years invitees suddenly pivoting into campaign speeches probably influenced this.

So, a welcome change.

I usually walk with the marches I’m covering, but for health reasons I can’t this time. So I’ve just arrived at Seattle Center and expect signal to degrade as folks gather.

I’ll try to keep you posted. :D

Across the way it does look like there’s a concert in progress. Folks around me are covered in colorful dusts and paints.

I had to double check my calendar to make sure it wasn’t Holi.

I’m so tempted to walk through and get spattered but I feel like that might make interviews more difficult later. lol

Some pre-gathering photos should be appropriate. So here’s what they apparently mean by the neighborhood sorting. In the distance you can see signs for North Shoreline, East Side, etc.

What caught my eye is the construction. The orange block lettering, suspended on netting, is the style of a specific local organizer: The Backbone Campaign.

If you read my coverage of Hands Off last year, you might recognize them as the massive “declaration of independence” folks.

https://evhaste.com/2025/04/22/the-antifascist-art-of-handsoff-seattle/

The Antifascist Art of HandsOff! Seattle

In my eyes, three things set HandsOff! Seattle apart from any protest like it: the sheer depth of knowledge, creative expression, and intersectionality of its homemade signage.

Haste Makes Waste
The photo that I forgot to attach. Lol. Scatterbrained

There’s a lovely xylophone band on the ground level.

They’ve gotten a couple of hecklers since I’ve been standing here, unfortunately. They dealt with it as gracefully as could be done. One guy, wearing camo, could be heard yelling “you forget where you come from. Where do YOU come from” as he left.

If you see the band, share some love, okay?

(Photo omitted since they’re getting hassled already)

I can confirm I am the first human for Central. Cap Hill represent! 🏳️‍🌈
A little ways away, there is some live performance art. A band of jesters are escorting “his royal heinous” Donald Trump, and making loud noises to distract onlookers from a clown who keeps dropping the Epstein files.

The organizers have been kind enough to share their materials (their nails are amazing). So I can tell you a bit about what we’ll be doing today.

Please be patient with me while I add alt text, there’s a lot to type!

This one says “find your neighborhood by the circles… meet organizations taking action at the rectangles”.

My favorite part of the plan is that they clarify that yes, you do need to talk to strangers, they’re not so scary. It attempts to guide shy attendees through the process of making friends with randos.

Again, I feel like this is in direct response to cynicism about protests like No Kings being performative.

Frankly, if you meet your people and do anything together in the future, I’d call that closer to antifascism than where we started.

Nearby human has a sign that says “REAL MEN LICK PUSSY, NOT BOOTS”.

Nearby attendees: Yeah, and real women lick pussy too!

I love Seattle.

The march is arriving, and folks are starting to trickle in to their neighborhoods!

I have counted two Amphipha frogs so far.

I will say I’m noticing a trend of mostly written signs, as compared to the graphic design leaning Hands Off.

I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that, though I might need to rethink my angle if that’s still true when the end of the march arrives.

The Twin Cities are definitely on the organizers minds. From general strike groups, to anti-Tesla boycotts, to folks with Backbone, everyone has referenced in some way a desire to match the grassroots energy of Minnesota.

A representative of one of the Seattle Indivisible groups says that there was a deliberate attempt to connect with and learn from folks there.

It does not, to my eye, seem like we’ve quite cracked the code on effective cross-org communications yet, but they’re trying.

Okeydoke, I’ve talked to a lot of people today and learned quite a bit. I think I’ve got most of the art I’m going to find, and I even met some of my cap hill neighbors and got contact deets.

I’d say that’s a mission accomplished, in the spirit of the thing. I do have a few closing observations.

The main strip above the international fountain has… how do I say this politely…? Corporate pride vibes.

There are a lot of disparate organization booths. I don’t think that’s necessarily a bad thing, that’s how organizing works. You find common ground.

Not all of them are united in messaging though. The best example I can find is this booth advertising Sawant.

Sawant was one of the politicians who, in my opinion, crashed previous anti fascist protests. Maybe it was even no kings.

Sawant’s campaign is, if you’re willing to be EXTREMELY generous, at best tangential to the work that’s being done here.

Just a couple hundred feet from that exact spot, an attendee remarked to me, unprompted and without relation: “voting is great but we can’t vote our way out of this… voting is how we got here”.

I specifically remember Sawant as being one of the politicians to drop in as a speaker in Cal Anderson last year, only to change the topic to her campaign instead of immigration.

Elsewhere there is a “general strike” group which literally just formed a couple of weeks ago.

That is an initiative I absolutely support. Pressed for details, however, they have no demands, no plan of action, no fundraising.

To be clear, we all have to start somewhere. I’m not shaming them for starting now. Just, illustrating that not all of these stalls have the same level of strength behind them.

I hope they’re talking to each other, but I’m not sure that’s the focus for them.

This is where my “corporate pride” comparison comes from.

Walking down the main strip requires a certain amount of skepticism of attendee motivation, which I am not accustomed to needing to employ at a protest.

And to be clear, the actual attendees, who are rallied under their neighborhood signs, do appear to be doing that work to talk to each other, and make specific plans. That’s rad as hell.

So if you are reading this in the crowd, I would say that is where the value is.

Stay on the green, and talk to your neighbors. Make some friends, and learn how to fuck some shit up. ✊

Overall, the program changes seem well-thought out, though turnout overall was relatively lower than I expected. Ultimately, numbers are less important than spurring people to post-protest action. That’s what I’m curious about.

I’m glad I came to see the new format, and I’m noodling on ways I can measure whether it makes a difference and people stick with it.

Anyway, that’s it for me. It’s time to go home.
Thanks for going on this adventure with me; if I’m happy with what I shot and make an article out of it (which I think I will), then I’ll post it on Fedi.

Stay safe, fam! ❤️

Breaking the ICE: Lessons from the Resistance in Minnesota

Announcing a countrywide speaking tour featuring anarchists from the Twin Cities who have participated in resisting the ICE occupation.

CrimethInc.
@stefani I think I’d quite like to go to something like this! Thank you for sharing.
@Haste How awesome!
@CalmPresence yeah I’m into the changes overall. Interesting experiment and I’ve not seen it before
@Haste love this
@abetterjulie thanks for coming along, fam!
@Haste Just knowing you're not alone is concrete benefit enough to make the march much more than performative. Getting a morale boost is not nothing!

@hakona I spoke with a teacher today who agrees with you! (For the record, so do I)

She told me that it means a lot to her immigrant students and their families, to see neighbors up and about on their behalf. Especially folks who they rely on every day.

I can only imagine the mental health toll the news has on those families right now. So even if that all folks can give, I think we should give it.

@Haste Is going up to a stranger and saying your name, rough address and what groups you're a part of really advisable?

Like, those are pretty much the exact questions I'd be asking if I were an undercover cop.

@ClaireH These are folks who specifically aren’t organizing today, but would like to someday. They have a different threat model than you or I do, and currently, nothing to interest authorities, even ones salivating for violence.

I don’t think it’s likely that police are pre-infiltrating group that don’t exist yet. They aren’t omniscient.

My last point, is that accusing everyone of being a fed is ALSO one of the primary ways to disrupt leftist organizing, by encouraging paranoia.

@Haste
The best anti-Seattle Freeze flier to date. 😁
@justin yeah genuinely I appreciated the ice breaker lines. I don’t need them because I’m a dork, but I know so many people who do.