Consider this flag the left-libertarian sister to the original Gadsden flag (“Don't Tread On Me” flag), a reclamation of the iconography of the “Join or Die” political comic illustrated by Benjamin Franklin. In No Kings-gold, the twin ouroboros is a reminder that this is not a war between YOU and ME, but is instead a war between US and THEM, as in THE MAN. The 1%. The owning class. The Epstein class. Accordingly, the snakes, named Liberty and Justice, have the nicknames You and Me.
This flag focuses on the collective, a reminder that if your neighbors rights are being challenged, that means your rights are being challenged. The reasoning for the dual snakes and collective terminology is to draw attention to the similarities between the people of the working class. You, the reader, are not so different from I, the creator of this text.
We might have different political opinions, we may have different skin colors or hair textures, we may have different gender identities or sexualities, we may have gone to different schools or have been raised in different towns. But we still have something in common.
We are working class, proletariats who have been born into the role of working to survive. I may be a lawyer, a doctor, a cab driver, a janitor, or you may be a fast food worker, a trucker, a construction worker, a nurse, maybe even unemployed. Either way, we are working class.
You and I.
Us.
Just as the ouroboros represents the cyclical nature of life, the twin ouroboros represents a duty everyone in the working class has:
To look out for thy fellow worker.
To love thy neighbor.
To team up in times of division (division that is encouraged by the owning class — look for the one who benefits).
To join hands in our fight against the owning class.
The people united will never be divided. This culture war benefits no one in the working class, it only benefits the owning class, because it divides us and prevents us from seeing the true enemy.
Open your eyes. It's time to wake up.
Entirely human made. No AI used.
Copyright 2026