Not with a policy.
Not with a speech.
Not with a war.
It starts with a parade.
A family shows up early. Coffee in hand. Kids on shoulders. Folding chairs lined up along the street.
They are not thinking about geopolitics. They are thinking about connection. Tradition. A moment that feels like home.
And then something rolls by.
Not a float.
Not a marching band.
Something built for a different purpose.
Heavy. Loud. Designed for conflict.
And now it is here.
No one votes on this moment.
It just happens.
And the next year, it is easier.
And the year after that, it is expected.
That is how culture shifts. Not all at once. One quiet normalization at a time.
We tell ourselves it is harmless.
It is history.
It is respect.
It is just for show.
But children do not process nuance the way adults do. They absorb signals.
What belongs here?
What do we celebrate?
What feels normal?
You can honor service without celebrating machinery.
You can respect sacrifice without displaying instruments of war.
You can support veterans while still protecting civilian community spaces from militarization.
Because community is not built on force. It is built on people.
For decades, armored military vehicles were not part of the Monterey 4th of July parade.
Then suddenly, they returned.
Not because the community clearly asked for them.
Because no one had yet drawn a line.
Until people did.
A letter was written.
A public comment was made.
A conversation started.
Not loud. Not hostile. Clear.
This does not belong here.
And the decision changed.
This campaign is about more than one parade.
It is about refusing to let militarization quietly become part of everyday civic life.
It is about being intentional about what belongs in spaces meant for families, neighbors, and shared celebration.
It is about asking a simple question:
What kind of community are we becoming?
We support:
If this matters to you, do not stay on the sidelines.
Culture is not just what we inherit.
It is what we allow.
This is not about stopping something for the sake of stopping it.
It is about defining what belongs in our community and what does not.
Help prevent the militarization of community life.
Stand for public spaces that reflect people, peace, and civic belonging.