The red sun still laying low over the far away horizon, rolling hills and glowing roads guide the way as you arrive in Topeka, Kansas. Navigating the sleepy avenues toward the state’s Capitol. The air is cool and humid and the limestone building reflects the warm light, an omen of the hot day to come.

A dozen volunteers are setting up canopies, pulling wagons loaded with water and speakers. A microphone was just plugged in at the foot of the stone south steps. Greetings are exchanged as tables erected for an art station, a volunteer check-in, first-aid. Hours before hundreds of people would join, a handful of smiling people handed out walkie talkies and shared sour sentiments about Sesame Street.

Spirits were high, despite the underlying sense of dire urgency which had called this group to spend their Saturday morning building the infrastructure to protest their own government. A jobs market in sharp decline, the forced famine in Palestine, President Trump and the Epstein List; conversations swirled between topics which elicited tones of real concern and uncertainty. Some topics contrasted in conversation, questioning a lack of youth particpation while criticizing the growing support for populism and socialism in younger voters.

Representatives from Indivisible Kansas discuss the day’s events with rally attendees while selling yard signs as a fundraiser for the ““Real Kansans. Real Voters. Real Fed Up,” billboard campaign in the Sunflower State. (Photo by Vince Chandler / Yellow Scene Magazine)

“I would ask people to talk to their neighbor, and not in a way that says ‘hey idiot..’ but more in the ‘are you aware’ way,” Kansas 50501 organizer Scott McFarland told Yellowscene during the protest. “[We need a] connection to the younger generation to work with us and help in clearing the apathy. There’s a lot of dislike of capitalism, they’re being labeled as socialists, but it’s just that they’re tired of the corruption in capitalism.”

As support organizations and political parties continued to arrive, the crowd grew. A visible majority were people over 40, many old enough to recall their experiences seeing the unrest around the Vietnam War while discussing today’s events. There was a voiced sentiment of shock that they were seeing authoritarianism in their lifetimes and a concern for disinterest and acceptance by younger Americans.

Previous 50501 protests have attracted thousands to the streets of the Kansas capital. Each week in cities across the state, grassroots activists maintain consistent presences in the +16 Trump/Vance state. Organizers for today’s “Rage Against the Regime” event were cautiously conservative with their expectations for attendance, hoping to see a few hundred.

Ultimately, almost 500 Kansans were gathered as our day’s sole speaker approached the microphone and greeted the crowd. With a flowing, energetic speech matching her audience’s inertia, she spoke for a fiery thirty minutes, leading them in chants between reflecting on her personal experiences extrapolated to the national policy conversation. A sexual assault survivor, she outlined her rage that day being fed by seeing a credibly accused sexual predator sit at the Resolute Desk, using his power to pardon other assailants.

Kansans from across the political spectrum rally together on Veterans’ Walk in front of the state Capitol in Topeka ahead of a march through the downtown urban center. Organized as a “Rage Against the Regime” the 50501 protest are a “a decentralized rapid response to the anti-democratic and illegal actions of the Trump administration.” (Photo by Vince Chandler / Yellow Scene Magazine)

Wrapping up with a moment of silence for the children of Gaza, the energy returned like a shockwave carried on the wall of sound produced from hundreds of hand-made noise makers breaking the quiet calm. From the steps of the Capitol, where attendees had gathered for a group photo, they stepped off down the Veterans’ Walk toward the town’s major thoroughfare.

Keeping to the sidewalks, marshaled by volunteers who maintained adherence to street signals and crosswalks, the hundreds of unified Kansans marched through the city center. Along commercial roads on a path which brought them past the county’s Republican offices, they raised their voices declaring their dissent to authoritarianism, the loss of due process, and cuts to public services like health care and education.

The line of protestors carrying signs, clanging pots, blowing horns, and chanting loudly stretched for blocks. Passersby honked encouragingly, waving and cheering from their windows as they passed. Not without opposition, some shared crude hand signals with anger on their faces.

An inarguable Republican stronghold, a Democrat hasn’t won the presidential ticket since before 1980 and their U.S. House representation has been overwhelmingly red in the same period, one district never seeing a Dem victory. Statewide and locally, though, there is some partisan flexibility, the Governor’s seat has been blue since 2018.

In the same time period, the population of Kansas has not kept up with national growth trends, seeing a state increase of less than 3% in the previous census. Kansas lost a seat in congress in 1990, and in the presidential race lost some influence with ten electoral college votes falling to only six. The fastest-increasing portion of their population is 65+.

Civic engagement is split into two majority coalitions, registered Republicans making up the largest group and only a few thousand behind are non-participants. Of the two million registered voters in the state, nearly 800,000 chose to stay home in November 2024.

Young voters continue to connect more with social issues and movements over partisan idols and party politics. At the county Democrats’ annual fundraiser following the 50501 protest, politicos grappled with how to translate the evolution of local engagement for ballot initiatives specific to issues like abortion and the economy into capturing votes for candidates.

Current electeds, alongside candidates vying for their own seats, shook hands with constituents while volunteers prepared a buffet of picnic staples. Awards and recognition were distributed for service to the chapter and speeches were given highlighting the party’s want for coalition building and grassroots persuasion.

“A couple times during the presidential election, I went to bed thinking that change was really going to come for our country, and then I woke up disappointed,” Topeka Mayor Michael Padilla told the crowd assembled in the IBEW hall. “But that doesn’t mean that that disappointment makes me less determined to make that change happen with the help of fellow Democrats, independents, and – yes – Republicans.”

Topeka Mayor Mike Padilla, a Democrat and former police officer, speaks on the need to reach out to everyone with a tone of kindness and a resolve committed to Democratic values during the annual Shawnee County Democrats Picnic, telling the crowd “it’s necessary for us to speak up. I get pushback, and its because they want to silence my personal opinion simply because I’m in opposition to what they seek. When asked why they oppose these ideas of democracy, and freedom, and civil rights for everyone. They’re usually hard pressed for answers.” (Photos by Vince Chandler / Yellow Scene Magazine)

Reflecting the sentiment, a majority of the conversation was centered on moving those who cast their ballots regularly from the more conservative Republican ticket to the centrist-leaning Kansas Democrat platform. While the state’s place in the abortion rights movement was rightfully celebrated, and the need to expand access to affordable housing was constantly mentioned, the theme centered openly on the need for bipartisan cooperation and converting existing voters rather than finding the messaging which would create new ones.

The historic vote rejecting the ban on abortion in the  Sunflower State saw an measurable shift in partisan response, illuminating the importance of elevating issues’ impacts above partisan and candidate politics. The Republican state voted against the ban, with more people casting a vote in the decision for abortion than the decision for president.

The sometimes apathetic unaffiliated voter in Kansas was engaged in this vote, legally unable to cast a ballot in the parallel primary elections but able to make a decision in the referendum. Almost 200,000 voters not affiliated with the two major political parties participated. In the lead-up to the election, Kansas was also the third most engaged state for young voters aged 18-29, with registration leaping from 2018 numbers and the Gen Z / Zillenial vote increasing their influence to the highest levels in thirty years.

Nearly 40% of registered voters under forty in Kansas cast their ballot in 2022, during a traditionally low turnout midterm primary election, called to action by an issue more than a person. In 2024, during the presidential race when voter turnout is traditionally at its highest, fewer than 2% of the same group went to the polls.

“One of the things that Kansans are good at, especially in some of the rural districts where I knock doors, is that we all have different opinions and we give each other time to talk,” Shawnee County Democrats Vice-Chair JP Porter told Yellow Scene Magazine at the event. “Right now, it’s time to build those relationships, just talk to people. Hear them out, make sure people are comfortable.”

As the Shawnee Democrats wrapped up their fundraising raffle with a 50/50, back at the Capitol another protest was beginning to be set up. While the morning saw hundreds rallying against the authoritarian creep in policy and posture by the federal administration, a few dozen were gathering to protest their state government in support of personal liberty and religious freedom.

The Satanic Grotto, an offshoot of The Satanic Temple formed in pursuit of increased autonomy, were returning for the first time since a series of dramatic moments during a previous protest they organized in March resulted in scuffles, police intervention, and four arrests. That event drew thousands to the Capitol grounds, a majority counterprotestors. Tonight, fifty gathered, including the police and five antagonists carrying crosses and warnings of eternal damnation.

While counter protesters and some attendees exchanged loud sounds and short statements, most stayed close to the newly erected sound system, once again at the bottom of the building’s south steps. Speakers and musicians exchanged the stage, bringing a mix of concert and rally to the crowd. Activist Ms. B spoke on the need to not be complacent, to not be lazy, in a moment that required presence and action. She illustrates her call to action with reflection and accountability for moments in her own past when she wished she’d done more.

Author, activist, and former local elected Mike Trapp quoted from his book “The Practical Guide to Building a Better World” offering his eleven suggestions to coalescing in movement work. He outlined his decades of experience advocating for a better world, discussing bearing witness to the slide from what he calls “friendly fascism” into something even worse. He encouraged looking past contrasts in aesthetic or approach to build allies aligned with the civic work to be done at a local level, in City Halls and on school boards, where individuals can have the most impact.

After a full concert set from Girard, Kansas metal outfit Rage Is My Rival, Satanic Grotto president Michael Stewart took the mic warning those still gathered as the sun sank below surrounding buildings that he was definitely going to cry. He thanked his peers, organizers, lawmakers, community members, and even the Capitol police who practiced their principles of supporting individual and religious liberty by fighting for the Grotto to secure the required permits for the protest to occur uninterrupted that evening.

The Satanic Grotto president Michael Stewart leads attendees on an umbrella march around the Kansas Capitol, stopping on the four cardinal coordinates and leading those gathered in a synchronized chant meant to evoke and emanate personal power. The Not Quite Witching Hour protest organized by The Satanic Grotto marked the end of a months-long battle to return to the spot exercising their first amendment rights after a briefly-chaotic culmination to the group’s previous event, a Black Mass held in the same spot in March 2025. (Photo by Vince Chandler / Yellow Scene Magazine).

He remembered aloud his assault and arrest at the Capitol earlier this year. He reflected on how people’s perceptions and preconceived assumptions often inhibited the message he was advocating for. He cited specific legislation being discussed inside the government chambers he stood before while gave encouragement to those in attendance to get involved. Offering testimony, contacting representatives, organizing neighbors, his plan for action mirrored that of the organizers earlier in the day: participation.

“We cannot be the only ones fighting,” Stewart told those gathered. “The intersectionality converges right here on this battlefield. Hiding from it will not make you safe, it will only make you an easier target. Everyone, everywhere, needs to pick their battle and drive it the [expletive] forward.”

From the jump, a group of political organizers identifying themselves as Satanic is going to cause controversy. Some will find it easy to discount their message because of the container in which it is distributed. Some write them off as unserious performative art, others take their cartoonish construct literally and refuse to listen for fear of devil worship being the core talking point. Their consistent pushback at over-encroaching authoritarian policy and intentional organizing messaging, in tandem with their undeniable regionally and nationally rippling impact – though – suggest that their efforts should be seen more seriously.

“From a marketing perspective, their ‘extreme’ branding definitely gets their group plenty of attention and free press, but then people just judge the book by its cover and don’t actually look into their really solid ethics and organizing tactics,” Nebraska political organizer JD Hanson told Yellow Scene while reflecting on how other Heartland movements see and feel their influence locally. “Some people just hear satanic and then completely tune out everything else.”

Conservative Kansas is the contemporary reality in the state the Westboro Baptist Church calls home. While registered Republicans have decreased by more than seven thousand people this year already, a majority of the state’s voters are GOP members. Nearly a million. The only group of voters to grow in 2025, by about 3,000 people, is the second largest pool: the unaffiliated.

Kansas has a history of standing ten toes forward for their principles. Bleeding Kansas fought a small war against Missouri slavers to found their territory as a Free Soil state. Infamous abolitionist John Brown first made national headlines by violently fighting against the institution on the eastern plains, years before he’d be remembered forever for his failed attempt to start an enslaved persons revolt at Harpers Ferry. Touring the Capitol’s visitor center you’ll see that this radical history is still celebrated.

Kansas resident turned activist Molly Tolly distributes hundreds of protest placards she handmade at her “Sign Library,” a pop-up table she erects at actions across the state. She has attended 38 protests so far in 2025, often bringing more than 100 signs, she allows attendees to borrow them for the day, seeing at least 80% returned after the event. Not sure what she could offer the movement as an individual working as a family caretaker, she identified this art as activism project as one small way she could have a large impact. (Photo by Vince Chandler / Yellow Scene Magazine).

Less than a mile from the heart of the state’s government stands the historic site for the Brown Versus Board Supreme Court Decision. A court case that could have only happened in Kansas, because segregation in the state which had rejected slavery in its constitution was considered at the time the “gold standard” for the immoral act. Kansans relegated legal segregation only to large population centers and only by local control. While some cities outlawed it outright, others segregated children while spelling out in the law equal distribution standards for resources, in contrast to some of the more cruel forms of legal racism in the deep south.

It was for these reasons that the NAACP chose Kansas schools as their battleground to elevate the fight against state-protected bigotry to the nation’s highest courts. If the organization could prove that the midwest standard for the Plessy Versus Ferguson “separate but equal” doctrine – which many people found acceptable – still created disproportionate harm to non-white students, then in contrast more violent forms in places like Louisiana or Arkansas couldn’t possibly stand.

Wherever they align ideologically, personal liberty is at the front of progressive movements in this central prairie state. Individuals find their place by measuring capacity and staying in their lane after it has been identified. Collecting impact statements from their neighbors and creating conversations on shared values, hoping to move them away from MAGA authoritarianism. Creating a pathway to political participation for ostracized weirdos or creating hundreds of handmade signs to distribute on loan at protests. Inside political party infrastructure or through autonomous grassroots organizing. In a moment that calls for many approaches converging toward a shared end, each individual voice creates a choir singing in chorus, though maybe still finding the harmony.

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Best known for capturing striking content from the frontlines of social movements, Heartland EMMY-nominated filmmaker and photographer Vince Chandler has spent 20 years creating art and documentary visuals across the U.S. They served as Communications Director for Denver City Councilwoman Shontel Lewis, and Vince has earned national recognition for their work as a visual journalist for The Denver PostVince was the principal cinematographer for the feature documentary film Running With My Girls, which premiered at the 2021 Denver Film Festival.

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What does resistance & resilience look like in the Heartland of America?

Sometimes it’s a protest outside an ICE detention center. Sometimes it’s a rural nurse explaining how Medicaid cuts will shutter the town hospital. Sometimes, it’s a law professor teaching systemic racism at a University in a state where CRT is banned in public schools.

As Trump’s second term unfolds — and the One Big Beautiful Act guts healthcare, empowers ICE, and reshapes American life — independent journalism is more vital than ever. However, the national press rarely shows up in the places where policy has the most impact.

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These American Crossroads is a collaboration between Vince Chandler, Emmy-nominated visual journalist, and Yellow Scene Magazine, Boulder County’s only independent newsroom.

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The post Solidarity, Bipartisanship, and Satanic Protest in Kansas appeared first on Yellow Scene Magazine.