This one is for the people who are done pretending fascism is just a history problem. It is not. It is a current problem, a neighborhood problem, a school board problem, a statehouse problem, and a daily life problem. So this Texas Anti-Fascist Union protest design shows up like a signal.
The graphic reads as an international union of anti-fascists, with Texas and Local 1845 stamped into the chapter line. The artwork pulls in a megaphone, broken chains, and raised fists, all inside a gear-like emblem with a lightly distressed finish. It looks like solidarity, not decoration.
This is for people moving through Houston, Dallas, Austin, San Antonio, El Paso, and Fort Worth who want anti-fascist gear that says what side they are on without a long speech. It also hits for smaller scenes and neighborhoods where people organize hard and keep showing up, from Montrose to Oak Cliff to East Austin to Deep Ellum.
Wear it to campus, mutual aid drops, town halls, late coffee runs, and protest days near UT Austin, Texas State, UH, Rice, Texas A&M, or UNT. It belongs in the same real world as hand-painted signs, group chats, and rides home after a long night.
And yes, the sports references are part of the local texture too. Cowboys country, Spurs city, Astros hats, Rockets bars, Mavs arguments, Longhorn Saturdays, Aggies chaos. The point is not team worship. The point is that anti-fascist politics live where people actually live.
Strange Gang made this for Texans and Texas people by choice, not just by birth certificate. If you want a protest piece that can work as a gift, a souvenir, and a warning shot in plain sight, this is the one.
It is also for the person who keeps getting told to calm down, be polite, wait your turn, and stop making things political. Existing in public is already political for a lot of people. This anti-fascist protest design is for that reality. It is solidarity gear for the loud ones, the tired ones, and the ones still building anyway.