Personal Safety

Your guide to personal safety in a shifting America

How might Project 2025 Impact Your Personal safety?

Project 2025 seeks to consolidate power within the executive branch, emphasizing loyalty, nationalism, and a disregard for dissent. Along with Donald Trump’s polarizing rhetoric, this will likely exacerbate hostility toward people perceived as outsiders or who challenge this ideology. There may be a surge in hate crimes against marginalized communities, widespread violations of constitutional rights, and diminished accountability for law enforcement.

Prep Kit

  • Learning self-defense and anti-harassment strategies can empower you to act decisively and stay safer in confrontational situations. These skills can help you de-escalate conflicts, assist others in volatile environments, and give you a real sense of psychological safety.

  • Participating in protests can come with risks, including potential hostility from law enforcement and counter-protesters. Reading up on protesting tips and knowing your local jail support services before attending can make a significant difference if situations escalate. Learn how to advocate for your rights safely and what to do in dangerous situations.

  • For those considering gun ownership, understanding your state’s gun laws and completing proper training is essential. While guns may provide a sense of security, they are particularly dangerous in homes with children, intimate partner violence, or mental health concerns. Learn more about responsible gun ownership, and be sure to store guns unloaded, locked, and away from unauthorized individuals.

  • Emergencies can happen without warning, especially during times of civil unrest or natural disasters. Having a go-bag with essentials like identification, medication, cash, and food ensures you can act quickly and protect yourself in a crisis.

Know Your State

Know YOur Stuff

220

Donald Trump issued 220 executive orders during his first presidential term. In comparison, Barack Obama issued 276 during his 2 terms as president.

Source: The American Presidency Project

17%

in 2017, there was a 17% increase in hate crimes compared to 2016, targeting race, religion, and sexual orientation

Source: FBI

2,500

2,000 - 2,500 people attacked the U.S Capitol on January 6, 2021, in an attempted self-coup.

Source: NPR via DOJ