Noise demonstration
A noise demonstration is a type of peaceful, disruptive protest that involves participants making noise with instruments, voices, megaphones, or improvised tools like frying pans.
Examples
United States
In the United States, noise demonstrations have been used outside police departments[1] and prisons,[2] as well as outside events such as political rallies or campaign events.[3] In 2020, a noise demonstration was held outside the White House to disrupt a speech by President Donald Trump.[4]

Noise demonstrations have been utilized in the 2025-2026 protests against mass deportation during the second Trump administration. Some protesters use whistles to alert other of the presence of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents or the occurrence of abductions by such agents.[5] Noise demonstrations have also been held outside federal buildings[6][7] and hotels housing ICE agents.[8]
Goals
There are multiple purposes to a noise demonstration and they can blend and overlap. Some goals include breaking isolation, disrupting business, waking oppressors up, resisting censorship, sharing joy, and building on-the-ground resistance connections.
If someone is captured, imprisoned, or stuck behind a border, it is possible to make enough noise that they can hear it and know there are people on the outside who care about them. Some noise demonstrations are done outside jails or prisons to show solidarity.
A key element of the demonstrations is that they become impossible to ignore. Many people or systems being protested are resistant to mild protest and rely on silence or complacency. Some gatherings gain protestors from regular pedestrians.[5]
See Also
References
- ^ Kropf, Mike (2021-04-23). "Photos: Noise demonstration in downtown Charlottesville". Charlottesville Tomorrow. Retrieved 2026-02-14.
- ^ Poncana, Mzwandile (2020-06-14). "Anti-Carceral Group Organizes Noise Demonstration Outside Bordeaux Prison | News". thelinknewspaper.ca. Retrieved 2026-02-14.
- ^ Kerr, Zak (2025-03-13). "Dickens Launches Reelection, Atlanta Organizers Push for Change". Atlanta Community Press Collective. Retrieved 2026-02-14.
- ^ "Protesters Try to Drown Out Trump Speech, Yell at Sen. Paul". Voice of America. 2020-08-28. Retrieved 2026-02-14.
- ^ a b "CrimethInc. : The Noise Demonstrations Keeping ICE Agents Awake at Their Hotels : A Model from the Twin Cities". CrimethInc. 2026-01-27. Retrieved 2026-02-14.
- ^ Pratt, Katie (2025-06-16). "'Ice Out of Austin' protest takes place in downtown Austin". FOX 7 Austin. Retrieved 2026-02-14.
- ^ "Protesters demonstrate against ICE in Downtown Austin Monday". kvue.com. 2025-06-15. Retrieved 2026-02-14.
- ^ Juhn, Chris (2025-12-12). "Noise protest at Edina hotel aims to get 'ICE out of Minnesota'". Sahan Journal. Retrieved 2026-02-14.