Strange Gang did not make this for people who want their politics hidden under beige little phrases and fake civility. This baby tee is for the people who already know what ICE is, what it does, and how much damage gets buried under official language. It is protest gear for people who are over the performance of neutrality and fully on the side of immigrants, neighbors, and community defense.
The front hits with "I like my I.C.E. crushed" and a shoe smashing ice. Not cute. Not polite. Not interested in compromise. Just a punk graphic with a very specific enemy and a very obvious point of view. That matters. A lot of protest clothing tries to sound brave while keeping one foot in the doorway. This one shuts the door.
The retro Y2K baby tee cut changes the whole energy. It is fitted if you want it to sit close and cropped, and it gets looser and slouchier if you size up. So whether your styling leans tiny tee with beat-up jeans, low rise chaos, cargos, plaid, boots, chains, or whatever else you are throwing at the day, it holds up. It looks like something you would wear to a show, to a march, to a fundraiser, to a late night food run after yelling yourself hoarse for a better world.
This collab with JULZ brings that punk edge without sanding anything down. It is anti-ICE, anti-fascist, pro-equality, pro-immigrant rights, and made for people who do not need a gentle introduction to the message. It is for abolitionists, organizers, loudmouths, mutual aid people, punks, artists, friends who show up, and anyone who knows community protection matters more than state violence.
There is a difference between having an opinion and actually wearing one in public. This tee is for the second group. The people who know that a shirt can be part armor, part conversation starter, part warning shot. The people who are tired of cruelty getting rebranded as order. The people who would rather be honest than respectable.
That is who this is for. Not everyone. Exactly.