Some designs ask for approval. This one does not.
Fuck IDF is built like a wall of refusal. The repeated text pattern keeps hitting, over and over, until the message stops feeling like decoration and starts feeling like a chant. It says exactly what is on the shirt because this is not the moment for vague symbolism, watered-down politics, or fake civility wrapped in nice typography.
This design is for people who support a free Palestine and are sick of being told to use gentler words for brutal things. 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 smug little performance where human rights suddenly become negotiable.
Strange Gang made this one for the people who do not separate style from conscience. The T-shirt carries that sharp, everyday punch. The long sleeve pulls the same message into cooler weather, late-night organizing, and the general season of being fed all the way up. The kids tee exists because some families are raising children around truth, solidarity, and the idea that silence is not neutrality. Different cuts, same refusal.
And that is what makes this design hit. It is blunt, but it is not empty. It carries a side. It names the violence. It does not hide behind coded language or pretend the stakes are abstract. The repeated Fuck IDF pattern turns the whole piece into pressure. You look once and get it. You look twice and it is still there, unapologetic.
This is also a collaboration with artist JULZ, which matters because the whole thing feels handmade out of anger, clarity, and zero patience for propaganda. Strange Gang is interested in clothing that says something before you even open your mouth. Not empty rebellion. Not costume politics. Real message, real position, real heat.
So yeah, it works as a gift. It works as a souvenir from a time when people refused to shut up. Mostly, it works for the wearer who wants protest apparel that does not flinch, does not hedge, and does not ask permission to tell the truth.