What Our Community Carried Home From March 28
After the streets emptied, readers shared what stayed with them... mothers, walkers, smiling strangers, new protesters, and a hope that's impossible to dismiss.
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The Stories That Stay With Us
We heard from readers across the country this week. What people carried home from March 28 was a sense of community and motivation to keep going.
Laura Charette wrote that she was “sharing it with my 86-year old momma.” One sentence, and it gives us another perspective. These moments didn’t end when crowds dispersed. They traveled home and became conversations across dining room tables, text messages, phone calls, and across generations. Those moments show us that standing up against fascism is something people feel proud enough to bring into their families.
Photo & Creative Sign Credit: Robin Elizabeth Simpson Scott
Courage Does Not Retire
Frankie Floors shared: “I’ll be 67 years old this summer and seeing the older generation some with walker’s and all with signs there standing up to the tyrant.”
Across the country, people showed up with walkers, folding chairs and bodies that don’t move the way they used to and convictions that have not budged an inch.
When older Americans show up like that, they’re modeling for every younger person watching. They’re saying, without a speech or a megaphone, that courage isn’t something you age out of.
And a Shout-Out to the Younger People Showing Up
One of the most hopeful reflections we heard came from readers who noticed more young people in the crowd this time.
Kathryn shared that she saw “more younger people this time,” including some whose parents said their kids were the ones asking to go to the march and the rally afterward. She wrote that they were “very eloquent about their concerns and very much informed about what’s happening.” This is huge because we keep hearing that younger generations are checked out or too overwhelmed to engage. Young people are paying attention and asking asking questions. They’re starting to show up more because they understand what’s at stake and paid attention in history class.
That should give all of us hope.
Brian Berlin echoed that same feeling, writing that in Olean, New York, there were more than 500 people there, including young, middle-aged, and older attendees, and that he was proud to be part of it. What this represents is a movement that’s not confined to one age group or generation.

Photo & Costume Inspiration By: Diane Halbert
They Want You Angry So They Can Say, “Look at Those Destructive Protesters.” That Is Why Your Joy Threatens Their Narrative.
Karen Grimes wrote about “the happy crowds, smiling and engaging with others for the good of our country.”
Bobbie Bishop put it this way: “The community! You never know who, and what you’ll see while standing (or sitting in my case) for our rights.”
Anger may bring people into the street. Community is what makes them come back.
And what readers described was not a crowd held together by shared outrage. It was people who felt less alone and people who looked around and realized that their neighbors and complete strangers still believed the same thing they did, that this country is worth the effort.
Vicki Griggs described “shared experiences and understanding seen through signs, songs, and chants,” and the hope those moments create for “our children and grandchildren.” This highlights what these gatherings produce beyond the day. They create visible and civic memory. They give younger people something to witness and older people something to pass on. They make hope a public act instead of a private wish.

Creative Sign By: harveygirl39
From Showing Up to Building Momentum
For some readers, March 28 was the beginning of something more concrete.
One community member, PoutySum8 🐸, shared that they attended their march and ended up meeting their district’s Democratic candidate running to take Andy Biggs’ seat in Arizona. An example of what these gatherings can do when they work. They don’t just express dissent but they become connective by introducing people to candidates, to organizers, to the next level of civic participation that turns a single afternoon into sustained local power.
The Restlessness Is Real And It’s a Good Sign
Not every reflection was celebratory. Some readers left their marches wanting more… sharper strategy, stronger economic pressure, clearer paths from protest to consequence.
They’re not saying nothing matters. They’re saying this matters so much that showing up once is not enough.
In a political culture that works overtime to convince people they’re powerless, that kind of impatience is energy looking for a direction.
And directing that energy into local organizing, voter registration, sustained economic pressure, and into the midterms, is the work that turns a day of action into a series of consequence, making Pretti Good trouble.
Was this your 1st, 2nd, or 3rd No Kings Protest?
LynseyFS :“My fave poster from Bedford Twp, MI protest - only about 150 people, but we’re loud & proud.”

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From Truth Matters
“Americans CAN stop this anytime without being arrested or punished in any way for their actions. STOP SPENDING on all but essential items and shift as much of that essential spending to local businesses. No need to stop eating out, just eat in locally run family eateries (NOT corporate chains). It’s about strategic spending decisions. It’s all about common sense, but if you need more detail, click here for my broader thinking. Given the SCOTUS ruling on tariffs, you now have even more power.
There is no case to be made for saying ‘there’s nothing we can do’ It really is very simple, and I would urge you to encourage everyone you know to become part of a sustained act of strategic economic disengagement, because I guarantee just by this most simple of actions, you can unlock the gate on the road back to real American values. A sustained 3-4% drop in consumer spending will occur if Americans have the collective and sustained patriotic determination to say ‘enough is enough’.
I have been to all 3 events here in SF where we fill the streets and it's dramatic. But at the first two, I just took my walker to Civic Center and stayed about 30 minutes, then went home.
On March 28, I found myself at the front of the march, shouting "No Magalomaniac Rule!" and carrying a sign saying MAKE ORWELL FICTION AGAIN. I followed all the way to the rally and stayed for two hours talking to people, engaging.
This feeling cannot be canceled by the flooding of news media reports with comments by bots and maga humans all saying the crap about "we don't have a king, we have a president". Might have been better to call this "No Tyrants" instead. But I will be moving forward. They're not stopping me.