Last weekend’s No Kings demonstrations—by some estimates , the largest single-day protest in more than 50 years —were filled with signs and slogans expressing just about every anti-Trump opinion imaginable. There were references to the Declaration of Independence and the New Testament, placards crammed with tiny type alleging vast pedophile conspiracies while demanding the release of the Epstein files, and, at least in Texas, T-shirts and posters reading “ Chinga tu MAGA .” At the demo I stopped by, some enterprising soul had even gotten up early to plant signs promoting freedom through cryptocurrency. The array of ideas verged on ideological cacophony—there was even someone protesting the ineffectiveness of the No Kings protests—but the point wasn’t to send any singular message, b
No Kings: What the protests and One Battle After Another share in common.

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