The ‘No Kings’ Halloween Parade
Moral Clarity Gets Lost in Clown Show Politics.
There was something amiss about what we’ve saw unfold in this third iteration of the “No Kings” rallies. Besides being awash with the hyper Trump Derangement Syndrome addicts, they present as a generic resistance movement—anti-power, anti-ICE, anti-establishment, anti-MAGA, anti-friggin-Auntie Em.
Yet, that’s the intended branding, because when you look deeper, what permeated the crowd was messaging which told a different story.
A smattering of signs and childish costumes featured clowns, frogs, dinosaurs, keffiyehs, “Free Palestine” signs, “Free Maduro,” and “Stop the War in Iran”—not “Free Iran” signs, by the way. Make that make sense.
This crowd seems happy to know that Iranians are being gunned down in the streets of Tehran for doing exactly what this clown show is allowed by law to do—protesting freely and screaming “Death to America” on our streets. All I can say to these basket cases is, “It’s time to make Americans great again.” Until then, our country is screwed. These people have not only lost the plot, they have also morphed into our enemies within.
What used to be concentrated on college campuses over the past couple of years following the October 7 war has expanded, migrated, and embedded itself into larger movements where people may not even realize what they’re standing for.
Let’s face it, “Free Palestine” has become one of the most vapid phrases people spew without stopping to ask what it actually means. Free from what? Free to become what? It’s been embraced as a moral absolute, when in reality it’s anything but simple. Palestinians are not free from Hamas. They’re not free from internal repression. And they’re certainly not free from the consequences of leadership that has chosen perpetual conflict over any form of coexistence. It’s in the friggin Hamas charter: “From the river to the sea.” CUT TO: “That shit goes both ways.” Careful what you wish for.
So, what exactly are these wannabe plebes advocating for? And who benefits from that ambiguity?
There is no simple answer to the question, because this isn’t just about protest culture anymore—it’s about ultimate influence with the intention of global dominance by radical Islam. The overall narrative has captured the minds—like a virus—of millions of Americans. It has soiled the Democrat Party with poisonous socialist rhetoric, which incentivizes the protests. These entitled Americans think they are the New Bolsheviks—it’s laughable, until we see the danger from the residue soiling public sentiment, promoted by the corrupt legacy media. It’s an information war gone awry, because for decades it has been creeping into various elements of our culture. It has now come home to roost, where Israel and the United States are failing to effectively fight back.
There are documented efforts—state-level efforts—designed to shape perception, to sow confusion, and to push messaging into the bloodstream of public discourse. Not just through official channels, but through proxies, through loosely aligned actors, through digital ecosystems that blur the line between activism and amplification. What starts as a tweet or a slogan doesn’t stay there. It explodes on campuses, marches, and multicultural movements that weren’t originally about this issue at all.
In fact, most of these brainwashed kids and middle-aged/older white people aren’t aware that they have been used for the greater good of radical Islam. And that’s the point.
Because if you look at human behavior—really look at it—this isn’t new. The Milgram experiment, conducted after Nazi Germany, showed how easily people will follow perceived authority, how quickly they’ll conform to a group dynamic even when something feels off. Add identity, emotion, and repetition into the mix, and it becomes even more powerful. People don’t just join movements—they absorb them. They internalize them. And eventually, they defend them.
We’ve seen this before in different forms, at different moments in history. Not identical—but similar in structure. A narrative takes hold. It simplifies reality. It offers moral clarity where none exists. And people, wanting to belong, wanting to be on the “right side,” fall in line.
Why Jews and their many organizations—declaring they’re fighting antisemitism while spending millions of dollars—can’t get out of their own way to combat this strategically is unacceptable.
My new mission is to break the chains and bring a new charge for all of us to work together, not limited to our own boardrooms and WhatsApp groups. Without this mission succeeding, why bother living one day at a time in a world that is going mad with anti-Zionist hatred ratcheted up to unprecedented levels? I don’t need to see what my grandparents couldn’t survive.
We don’t matter when we are not mattering. My mantra to live by.
It’s in the title of my book, click here.
