I didn’t feel compelled to join a “No Kings” protest in June or last weekend, and don’t know any other Black person who had been burning to attend one. But Saturday in New York City, I met a friend from out of state for lunch, and she said afterward that she wanted to attend a protest. So, we went looking for one. While walking toward Union Square, someone randomly handed me a “No Kings” sign. I took it and held it high, becoming a sort of one-woman march — and a target — as we walked 30 blocks. Eventually, we saw a spattering of what was left of the protest at 14th Street. The New York Police Department reported that 100,000 people demonstrated across all five boroughs, but our late arrival meant we had missed the thousands that had crowded the square.
What are they going to do now that this demonstration is over?
Where were they now? I wondered. And, more importantly, what are they going to do now that this demonstration is over?
As for my friend and I, we heard a few speakers, and then we wandered away.
There were reportedly more than 2,700 “No Kings” protests across the U.S., and organizers said nearly seven million people participated. That is far smaller than the 15 million to 26 million people who told pollsters they protested George Floyd’s murder in 2020. And even though more people appear to have attended Saturday’s protest than the up to five million people believed to have attended the Women’s March the day after Donald Trump’s first inauguration in 2017, it’s my assessment that “No Kings” doesn’t match the other two in power.
Within the Black community, one heard lots of comments suggesting that the “No Kings” protest was not something we should bother with. LaTosha Brown, co-founder of Black Voters Matter, pushed back against that idea in a Monday interview with “Here and Now.” However, even as she argued that she didn’t think Black people should withdraw participation from “No Kings” events, Brown did say that Black women are saying, “We will no longer be the shock absorbers for all the pain that happens politically in this country.”
Brown spoke about the frustration of Black women always being expected to be on the frontlines and leading the charge “challenging patriarchy” and “these racist systems.”
There’s no clear sense of what percentage of Saturday’s seven million protesters were Black or how many typically engaged Black people deliberately decided against participating Saturday, but it struck me Saturday that there are at least two major reasons Black people aren’t really bothering with the “No Kings” protests.
First, “No Kings” seems like an attempt for white America to figure out something about itself, namely the relationship between whiteness, white supremacy and democracy. While I’m not convinced white Americans can do that work without Black people, many of us just refuse to make ourselves available to spell out this relationship for the umpteenth time. The people organizing and attending “No Kings” protests want to make these protests about universal democratic values, as if whiteness has not always been the great challenge to those values. Whiteness and its allies created the mess we’re in; so white people need to get serious about their collective behavior and forms of resistance that can truly meet this moment.








