The Supreme Court has affirmed that parody and satire are protected in the United States by the First Amendment to the Constitution.
Presumably, that protects someone who writes and publishes a note created to parody the thinking and writing of a semi-literate, conspiracy-selling, Putin-loving elected official.
Question: does the First Amendment also protect the creator from sending parody notes personally addressed by U.S. Mail to Republican members of Congress and their staff persons.
Another question: What about personally addressed e-mails, or JPGs on the social media feeds of elected officials — federal, governors, state legislators.
How about slipped through the mail slots at home-town offices of legislators?
Trumpism is grim, and as the layers of its evil onion are peeled back every day, it looks grimmer and grimmer.
Sometimes — in the face of extraordinary levels of grimness — a quick little political prank might be just what the doctor ordered… especially if done by hundreds of pranking satirists sending thousands of notes, and executing them so well that it leaves legislative staff wasting time wondering “is this another one of those stupid “joke notes,” or is this the one-in-a-million that is actually from The man?”
The font is called BF Tiny Hand
Parody note created in MSWord, saved to pdf, then converted from pdf to jpg.