Some protest gear whispers just enough to feel safe. This is not that.
Fuck IDF is built for the people who are past careful phrasing, past polite euphemisms, past the whole dead ritual of acting respectable while people are being bombed. Strange Gang made this design to land hard. Not as an abstract statement. Not as vague symbolism. As words. Repeated, stacked, undeniable words.
The crewneck sweatshirt wears the message right on the front, a wall of Fuck IDF text that does not let the eye wander off and pretend it missed the point. The hoodie plays a different game. Small Strange Gang x JULZ hit on the front, large print on the back, so the message follows you out the door and keeps speaking after you pass. Same anger. Same side. Different impact.
This is for people who support a free Palestine and are sick of hearing brutality described like a policy disagreement. It is for people who are against what the IDF is doing in Gaza and the West Bank. It is for people who want an end to bombing, an end to occupation, and an end to the lie that silence is somehow the mature position.
There is a reason this design feels relentless. It is a collaboration with artist JULZ, and it carries that pressure on purpose. The repeated text pattern does not decorate the garment. It builds force. It turns the whole surface into refusal. That is what makes it hit different from generic protest merch that looks like it came out of a focus group and died there.
Wear the crewneck when you want the message facing forward all day. Wear the hoodie when you want that back print to keep working the room. Either way, this is for marches, cold-night organizing, mutual aid runs, classes, errands, late trains, bad headlines, and every other ordinary moment where being neutral feels rotten.
It also makes sense as a gift. It works as a souvenir from a time when people chose clarity over comfort. Mostly, it works for the person wearing it, the one who wants their clothes to say exactly where they stand before anyone asks.