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Fighting Fuels Him.
Mockery Mutes Him.
Protest slogans like ‘Get ICE out’ don’t land with Trump. His power-hungry ego loves when we fight. But when he's the joke, he loses interest and we win. We speak to what he actually responds to: public perception and image.
We use Baby Trump satire to turn Trump into a national joke and make the attention he craves work against him. Through peaceful, highly visible actions, we aim to transform ICE protests from spectacles of hate into moments of mass mockery. When he becomes the punchline, the power dynamic shifts. We’re building this movement to mobilize quickly in the next occupied city.
Our goal isn’t to debate our rights — it’s to saturate the media until Trump pulls ICE out of our cities. When policy fails, psychology prevails.


This May Seem Childish.
That's the tactic.

This isn’t how we prefer to show up, but we must protect our communities NOW while working for lasting change.
Historically, satire has been one of the few tools that reliably punctures power. Political cartoons and ridicule has always reached places protests and arguments could not. Anger makes powerful figures look strong. Laughter makes them look small. And small is where control begins to slip. Trump responds to attention, image, dominance, and public perception.
Fighting fuels him.
Ridicule disarms him.

When Messaging Matters
Trump loves nothing more than to be called a "King"
and he loves watching millions of people reinforce that image at our No Kings rallies. The participation is monumental, but the message only rallies the people who already care. It doesn’t speak the language Trump responds to.
"Diaper Don" grew out of one of Trump’s own favorite tactics — labeling. And turns it back on him to sharpen and strengthen our message.

If You’re Feeling Hopeless You’re Not Alone.
So many of us are watching what’s happening in our cities and feeling angry, helpless, and exhausted. We call representatives. We sign petitions. We wait for policy — and nothing changes. Meanwhile, communities are living with fear, and it feels like there’s nothing ordinary people can actually do.
This movement was born from that feeling. Not rage. Not hopelessness. But the need for something we can act on.
