Maga is
painting Saturday’s protests as violent treason. Prove them wrong
Judith
Levine
Trump
allies would love an excuse to step up their crackdown. Nonviolence, both
disciplined and open-hearted, must define the day
Fri 17
Oct 2025 06.00 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/oct/17/no-kings-protest-weekend-maga
“They
have a ‘Hate America’ rally that’s scheduled for October 18 on the National
Mall,” the House speaker, Mike Johnson, said on Fox News on Friday. “It’s all
the pro-Hamas wing and, you know, the antifa people. They’re all coming out.”
The
Republican Minnesota congressman Tom Emmer said the party’s “terrorist wing”
was holding the “Hate America” rally. “Democrats want to keep the government
shut down to show all those people that are going to come here and express
their hatred towards this country that they’re fighting President Trump,” said
the House majority leader, Steve Scalise. The transportation secretary, Sean
Duffy, embellished the story on Fox, referring to the demonstrations’ “paid
protesters” and adding: “It begs the question who’s funding it.”
These
people are, of course, slandering the second round of No Kings marches,
following those on 14 June, which dwarfed Trump’s pitiful birthday party
military parade. This time the events – more than 2,500 of them, according to
organizers, planned for every state – promise to be even larger.
Trump’s
allies are trying to overwrite the patriotic, historically resonant words “No
Kings” with insinuations of treasonous violence.
Everyone
participating in the protests must prove them wrong. Nonviolence, both
rigorously disciplined and open-hearted, must define 18 October.
The
stakes are bigger than anything that happens tomorrow. Because these
politicians are not just talking. This smear campaign is one skirmish in the
all-fronts war on a vaguely defined leftwing entity the administration calls
“antifa”. This war – declared in the 25 September national security
presidential memorandum, Countering Domestic Terrorism and Organized Political
Violence – is not just supported by propaganda. Disinformation is its essence.
The
national security reporter Ken Klippenstein published a restricted-circulation
FBI/homeland security bulletin on “domestic violence extremists” (DVE),
released on 1 October, that links attacks on Ice buildings to peaceful anti-Ice
demonstrations. Since June, it says, “small groups of threat actors, some of
whom are DVEs, have leveraged large, lawful protests” in California and Oregon
“to engage in violent activity” against Ice facilities and “violent
confrontations with law enforcement”.
Last
week, at a White House “antifa roundtable”, the homeland security secretary,
Kristi Noem, claimed: “Antifa is just as sophisticated as MS-13, as [Tren de
Aragua], as Isis, as Hezbollah, as Hamas, as all of them.” The US attorney
general, Pam Bondi, thanked the treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, “for getting
to the bottom of these funding mechanisms and individuals who are perpetuating
[sic] this violence on our American cities”.
Commentators
on the “Hate America” blitz, including some of the events’ organizers, have
called it an attempt to silence dissent by scaring would-be marchers into
staying home. My hunch is that diminishing the crowds is just half of the
strategy. The other half is more pernicious. With Ice and the military already
dispatched to terrorize Black and blue cities, such language may inspire
civilian paramilitaries – many of them armed, organized and trained – to go
into the streets and cause mayhem.
These
militias took action on 6 January 2021. They are itching for another
opportunity to attack the “enemy within”, and they don’t need explicit orders
to do so. “Hate America” is the phrase that could impel them to act.
Maga
wants nothing more than violence at the marches
In larger
cities like New York and San Francisco, the marchers will far outnumber any
counter-protesters. In the cities occupied by federal troops, where local
police don’t relish the optics of teargas wafting through crowds of elderly
baby boomers and babies in strollers, there’s no guarantee the feds will
restrain themselves. The national guard and Ice have already gassed and
pepper-sprayed demonstrators apparently doing nothing more aggressive than
standing around and yelling, or, like the Chicago pastor shot in the head with
a pepper ball canister, nothing aggressive at all.
Enter the
freelance enforcers. And it’s in the red states, where gun laws are lax and
progressives constitute a small minority, that the odds of aggression and
goading to aggression by Maga loyalists are highest.
Maga
wants nothing more than violence at the marches. Any violent clash, no matter
who starts it, will be a green light to the administration to step up the
policing crackdown, including on Saturday. The White House deputy chief of
staff, Stephen Miller, has been tossing around the word “insurrection” to
describe peaceful opposition to the Trump agenda. The president could use
anything construable as chaos to invoke the Insurrection Act.
Nonviolence
is not the same as passivity; it’s the antithesis of surrender. It is not mild,
not even friendly. Contradictory as it sounds, steadfast nonviolent resistance
against a violent state is the most righteous expression of rage.
It’s
reassuring that the national non-profit Indivisible, which is also reportedly
in Trump’s sights, is among the groups at the helm of the No Kings events.
Since its founding in 2016, the organization has been committed to nonviolence.
“We reject all forms of political violence and intimidation, no matter the
source or the target,” reads its website. “That’s not just a moral stance –
it’s a strategic one. Movements that create lasting change do so by building
trust, forging solidarity and demonstrating discipline, even in the face of
threats or attacks.”
Almost
all of the 250 partner organizations that appear on NoKings.org are as
politically vanilla as progressives can get: the ACLU, Faithful America, the
Sierra Club, the Feminist Majority.
Alert to
the administration’s provocations, Indivisible provides detailed information on
running legal, safe and peaceful events. “We expect all participants to seek to
de-escalate any potential confrontation with those who disagree with our
values,” it says. Weapons of any kind are always prohibited.
The good
news is that nonviolence is the 21st-century US left’s default behavior. With
few exceptions, it is not just nonviolent; it is anti-violence. Prison
abolition, disarmament, the feminist politics of care, pacifism – these are
leftwing movements. By contrast, extreme-right causes, institutions and tropes
– gun rights, the carceral state, the “warrior ethos” – spell out a politics of
coercion, cruelty and punishment.
On 18
October, tens of millions of people in the streets, peacefully exercising the
democratic rights that the Trump regime is laboring to eliminate, will give the
lie to Maga’s hallucinatory network of bomb-throwing traitors. No Kings will
show America who the real haters are.
Judith
Levine is a Brooklyn-based journalist, essayist and author of five books. Her
Substack is Today in Fascism

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