TWO WAYS TO GET YOUR ASS TO D.C.
Because democracy doesn’t defend itself — it carpools.
There are two ways to make history November 20-22: the funded route and the self-funded route. Unless you’re flying, you’re going to D.C. in something with wheels, windows, and at least one passenger screaming “drive faster” while livestreaming the end of the republic.
If you’ve got money, or someone in your orbit does, go with CharterUp.com. It’s the clean, professional, fully legal way to move a small army. You punch in your dates, locations, and destination, get a quote, and maybe even shave a little off the price if you ask about military or veteran discounts. When you’re ready, you pay the bill, grab your crew, and start spreading the word. Post it, tweet it, email it, text it to the uncle who still thinks voting doesn’t matter. The goal is simple: fill the bus. And don’t stop there—tap every activist network in reach, from 50501 and Indivisible to your local Democratic Party chapter. CharterUp will cost somewhere between two grand and twelve, depending on mileage and how far your collective outrage can carry you. But really, can you put a price on arriving in D.C. with a bus full of citizens who still give a damn?
If money’s tight, or you’d rather go grassroots than group rate, Rally.co is your weapon. You type in your starting point and the destination—Washington, D.C., obviously—and Rally handles the rest. You share your route online, post it in your community groups, tag your friends, and let other passengers book seats until that bus is full. The beauty of Rally is that no single person eats the cost; it’s democratic travel for a democratic cause. A few bucks per rider, split evenly among everyone bold enough to care. It’s Kickstarter for democracy, without the grifters and vaporware.
Either way, the message is the same: stop watching history and start showing up for it. Every revolution has its ride, and this one has a Wi-Fi password. Get on the bus, bring your coffee, and make sure your sign fits through the door. Democracy doesn’t die in darkness—it dies in daylight while decent people stay home because they couldn’t be bothered to click “confirm booking.”
So pick your option, CharterUp or Rally, and move. Pack your snacks, charge your phone, and tell the driver you’ll sleep when freedom’s safe. The country’s circling the drain, and if fascism gets a motorcade, the least we can do is give democracy a convoy.
If you’re coming to D.C., you already understand the assignment. You’re not a spectator — you’re a participant in the messy, loud, spine-stiff part of democracy that still refuses to die quietly. Closer to the Edge isn’t just covering the movement; we’re in it. We’ll be in the streets, on the rooftops, in the hallways of Congress, and on every damn bus rolling toward the capital.
Subscribe if you want to stay plugged into what’s happening on the ground — not the sanitized version the networks will air two days late, but the real thing: the noise, the sweat, the chaos, and the courage of ordinary people showing up when it matters most.
Because Washington, D.C. isn’t just a destination — it’s the proving ground. And truth doesn’t live in the middle. It bleeds on the edge.





This is such great info! I am likely going solo and had been wondering exactly how to coordinate the logistics etc. Rally is a perfect solution!!! I’ve checked it out and will now be able to plan where to stay also by targeting the Rally departure location. I’d been on the fence, taking this info as a sign to get my ass to DC!
Thank you for the valuable information. It's appreciated.