Black Lives Matter-themed signs

In 2020 many issue-based yard signs emerged in neighborhoods across the United States supporting multiple left-wing movements commonly with a Black Lives Matter theme.[1] Stemming from the original "Kindness is everything"[2] sign with the introductory line “In this house, we believe:”[3] many iterations begin more succinctly “We believe” after which a list of movements is enumerated often starting with Black Lives Matter. An even stack of colored lines of correlated phrases stand in vibrant contrast to one another against a black background.

We Believe sign in Arlington, Virginia, October 2020

In big cities especially, partisan political signs for the 2020 election have largely been passed over in favor of social justice signs.[1] The Kindness is Everything sign originated as a white woman's show of opposition to Trump on his first day in office.[4] The black background of a Black Lives Matter-themed sign along with Black Lives Matter being prominently listed across almost every variation makes it an ideal vehicle to drive home a group of far-left solutions every time a BLM protest is triggered.[5] One interracial couple alone has sold thousands of BLM-themed signs to place in the yard and also provides messages to put on the car and on oneself.[6][7][8]

We Strive to sign in Arlington, Virginia, October 2020

Doubting the success of social justice,[9] one Black Lives Matter-themed sign proposes historically proven solutions to resolve the same issues as the We Believe sign.[10] It has the introductory line “We strive to” after which a list of words combined from the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution are enumerated in lines of the same color for comparison with the We Believe sign, starting with Secure Life.[11] While this bi-partisan iteration gives both sides hope of actually resolving these issues, the end result of the Constitution solution is not guaranteed to be a balanced compromise.[12]

References

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