Project Mail Storm
A peaceful protest. A postal uprising
On Saturday, over 13 million of us took to the streets. We marched for our rights, our autonomy, our lives.
We rallied. We chanted. We held hands with strangers and remembered what it feels like to be part of something bigger than ourselves.
But here’s the truth no one likes to say out loud:
Protest is not a one-day event.
It’s a ritual.
A commitment.
A heartbeat we choose to keep alive—week after week—no matter how tired we are, no matter how much they want us to sit down and shut up.
So if you marched this weekend and felt that electricity under your skin… if you remembered what patriotism actually feels like (not the fake, flag-waving kind but the real kind—sacrifice, power, and purpose)…
Then it’s time to carry that energy into something consistent.
Enter: Project Mail Storm.
What Is Project Mail Storm?
Project Mail Storm is a weekly protest by mail.
It’s a peaceful, persistent act of disruption.
It’s glitter bombs in envelopes. It’s junk mail with messages scrawled across them. It’s repurposed cereal boxes folded into fury.
It’s grassroots rage made tangible—and sent directly into the system.
Why mail?
Because real, physical letters create friction.
They take manpower to sort, scan, and log.
They cost money. They demand attention.
They create clogs in the machine—and baby, we’re here to clog it.
Why This Works
The White House gets about 5,000 letters per day.
We want to hit 2 million letters per day. (That’s 14 million per week)
Not emails. Not tweets.
Paper. Envelopes. Postage. Disruption.
This isn’t a cute campaign.
It’s a soft sabotage of the bureaucracy that upholds authoritarianism.
In Nazi Germany, one of the few things that slowed the regime’s destruction was its own paperwork.
The system got tangled in red tape. And that red tape? It saved lives.
We’re here to tangle it up again.
But this time, with letters, stickers, postcards, and notes that say: We see you. We’re watching. And we’re not going anywhere.
What You Can Send
A handwritten letter demanding action or accountability
Junk mail repurposed into protest
A note on the back of a receipt
A glittery cut-up cereal box that says: “You’re doing a trash job.”
A pre-written template from the ProjectMailStorm.org toolkit
We Made It Easy
Inside the Project Mail Storm Toolkit, you’ll find:
Printable protest letter templates
Talking points
Addresses for the White House and key congressional targets
A mailing calendar based on generational impact (so Gen Z floods on Mondays, Boomers on Thursdays, etc.)
Plus a downloadable explanation page you can tuck into every envelope
It’s all free. It’s all ready to go. You just have to pick up the pen.
This Is a Ritual Now
Set aside ten minutes a week.
Light a candle. Pour some tea. Write your fury down in ink.
Make protest part of your rhythm.
Because that’s how movements survive.
Not through burnout. Through ritual. Through community. Through storm after storm after storm.
So join us.
📮 Mail them your outrage.
💌 Mail them your fire.
✉️ Mail them the truth they’re trying to silence.
Because protest doesn’t end with a march.

I remember back in late 60's tearing the postage paid card from Newsweek and writing anti war slogans. It was a lot of fun. Thanks for the link.
Where are you getting your numbers? After reading 13 million when the general consensus has been 5 million, realized that this is article is not worth reading.