Across the country, a warning is spreading: this is how it starts. On March 28, that tension reaches Fresno. From 10:00 AM to noon, along Blackstone Avenue between Nees and Alluvial, people will gather — not behind a single leader, but around a shared alarm.
There will be signs. Voices. Anger. And a message that cuts through everything else: No Kings.
Expect traffic slowdowns. Expect visible frustration. Expect a crowd that may be small by national standards — but part of something much larger, unfolding across the country at the same time.
There is no central command behind this. No official platform. No single spokesperson. That’s not a weakness — it’s the point. This is what a decentralized warning looks like, people organizing without waiting for permission, without waiting for direction, without waiting for it to be safe.
This moment is no longer about policy details or partisan wins. It’s about limits. How much power is too much? How long before silence becomes complicity? No Kings is no longer just a slogan. It’s a line being drawn and on March 28, this line will be visible.