Free speech belongs to ALL of us.


A citizen movement to protect lawful free speech by uniting supporters of the Constitution.


Why Unite—Not Divide


We’ve all been trained to sort into camps and shout. Most of us want something better: a country where we dispute vigorously and still shake hands after. Free speech is the common ground.

We’re not here to get louder; we’re here to get smarter. Verify facts, organize calmly, redirect spending, and reward platforms that carry lawful voices—even when they’re unpopular or we disagree with them.

A patriotic banner with red, white, and blue elements, including silhouettes of people, a waving American flag, and text advocating for free speech and unity against fear.

Late-night hosts like Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel keep the public square ventilated—sometimes we laugh, sometimes we wince, but the point is that lawful jokes and sharp critiques can air. And when a voice like Charlie Kirk’s—who openly argued for free speech and debate—was silenced when murdered at Utah Valley University, it underscored the stakes: speech requires courage, and society must protect space for disagreement without violence. “Protect It Together” stands with the principle behind all three: let lawful speech air, let critics answer, and let citizens choose—using our wallets and our words to reward platforms that carry diverse viewpoints and restore support when openness returns.

Political graphic with quote from Charlie Kirk stating, "When people stop talking, that's when you get violence." The background has white stars, and the right side shows a logo with silhouettes of people, an American flag, and the phrase "Protect It Together." The colors used are red, white, and blue.

Political campaign banner with red, white, and blue design, featuring text that says, 'We can disagree and still be agreeable people. Free Speech Belongs to We, the People.' and a graphic of diverse silhouettes of people and an American flag.

How We Win…Together

1 | Switch & Reward

Watch/listen on outlets that carry the content. Prefer their sponsors when you shop. Tell brands you switched because they supported openness.

Subscribe or follow • Buy from their advertisers • Leave a positive note explaining why

2 | Pause Spending on Censors

If a station or sponsor blocks lawful voices, pause purchases. Be respectful and specific about why.

Subscribe/switch providers • Choose alternatives • Keep receipts; track redirected dollars

3 | Send the Sponsor Note

“Hello—I’m a customer. I value lawful free speech. While your ads run on platforms restricting lawful viewpoints, I’m pausing purchases. If carriage returns, I’ll gladly resume—and prefer your brand. Please share with your media team. Thank you.”

Copy Message • See Examples • Share Your Result

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LIFT THE DISCUSSION

Guiding Principles

  • Pro-Speech, Nonpartisan: Left, right, independent—we share the same oxygen: lawful speech.

  • Strategic, Peaceful Pressure: We vote with dollars. Reward openness; pause spending on censors.

  • Evidence Before Action: Screenshots, timestamps, program context. No call-outs without proof.

  • Carrot + Stick: Prefer platforms that carry lawful voices; resume purchases promptly when carriage returns.

About Us

“Protect It Together” is a citizen-first, friendly-innovator voice: neighborly in tone, inventive in tools, and unmistakably patriotic without being partisan. We speak with calm confidence and civic pride—rooted in the Constitution, respectful of every neighbor, and focused on effective action that everyday people can take in minutes. We value dignity, reciprocity of speech, and money-where-your-mouth-is accountability so citizens feel respected, actions are effective, and contributions are genuinely valued.

Protect free speech. Do it together.

Two people are seen from behind, wrapped in an American flag, in a parking lot with cars and group of people in the background during dusk.
Truth requires room for disagreement. We defend that room—together.

FAQs

Is this about agreeing with every message?
No. It’s about defending the right to speak—especially when we disagree. That keeps dialogue honest and power in check.

Is this partisan?
No. We invite left, right, and center. The standard is simple: carry lawful speech.

Why money instead of outrage?
Because budgets listen. Calm, repeated consumer choices move markets without burning bridges.

How do we avoid collateral harm?
Prefer local alternatives, name policies not people, and resume purchases promptly once openness returns.

Two women having a discussion at a table, one appears to be explaining something, with a laptop in front of her, in a modern office with potted plants in the background.