This one is for the people in Oregon who are done pretending neutrality is a personality.
Not the fence-sitters. Not the aesthetics-only crowd. Not the people who think a little silence and a nice coffee somehow count as solidarity.
This is for the ones who know immigrant rights are human rights, who hear anti-fascist and think yes, obviously, and who do not need their politics watered down for anyone's comfort.
The women’s baby tee cut gives it that retro Y2K shape, which is exactly why it hits. Fitted if you want it close. Looser if you size up and want it to feel more thrown on, more last-minute plan, more meet me downtown. It looks right with beat-up jeans, tiny shorts, cargos, zip hoodies, old sneakers, heavy boots, smeared eyeliner, and the kind of day that starts with a text and ends with a crowd.
On the front is our Oregon Rebel Alliance graphic, built around the western meadowlark, the official state bird, reworked into a rebel emblem that does not sit quietly. The print is lightly distressed, which gives it the right amount of wear, like it belongs outside, not folded up in some polite little drawer.
This shirt is for Portland people who know exactly why they are angry. For Eugene punks, Salem organizers, Corvallis students, and people around Ashland, Bend, and Gresham who are carrying the same fire in different zip codes. It makes sense on campus, at a rally, in the grocery store, at a dive bar after a long day, on a sidewalk with a sign in your hand, or layered under a jacket when the weather decides to act like Oregon again.
Strange Gang made this for the people who still believe community defense matters. For the ones showing up against ICE raids, against fascist garbage, against the whole rotten machine that keeps asking vulnerable people to pay the price.
It is a shirt, yes. It is also a signal.