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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. We're building this movement so we can quickly mobilize in the next ICE-occupied city.
Our goal isn’t to debate our rights — it’s to saturate the media until Trump pulls ICE out of our cities. Fighting with policy is NOT working- so we employ psychology.


Protesting Smarter
Not Harder

"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. We use behavioral psychology to organize peaceful, highly visible satire at ICE protests — transforming them from spectacles of anger into moments of mass mockery. When Trump becomes the punchline, the power dynamic shifts. The attention he craves stops working for him.
Fighting fuels him.
Ridicule disarms him.
Not everyone can travel. Not everyone can stand in the crowd. But now, Baby Brigade supporters can still place themselves directly into each protest or movement.
Our primary donation option is a personalized sign. When you claim one, your first name — or someone you choose — is written on an official Baby Brigade sign, and physically carried at a live action. Follow our social media and watch for your signs at the next protest. Even better, help us get your sign on national TV.
If signs are sold out, or if you’d simply like to further support the movement, you can also donate any amount to help provide protest supplies, Baby Trump costumes, visual materials, and transportation for Baby Brigaders.
Turn Your Support Into Something You Can Follow

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.
