As a parent, I care deeply about what kind of world my kids will inheritโ€”and who theyโ€™ll grow up to be in it. Thatโ€™s why, amid rising political authoritarianism, white nationalism, and book bans, I take them to punk shows. Not just for the music (though thatโ€™s part of it), but because punkโ€”especially the antifascist, antiracist strain that has long thrived in underground spacesโ€”is one of the few places where resistance isnโ€™t just theoretical; itโ€™s loud, embodied, and lived. Punk shows offer my kids a crash course in moral clarity and historical memory at a time when those values are under open attack in our America.

This might seem like an odd educational strategy. After all, punk has never been about decorum or safety. But thatโ€™s precisely the point. In a moment where public schools are being stripped of honest history, where LGBTQ+ books are being pulled off shelves, and where Donald Trump openly echoes fascist rhetoricโ€”calling immigrants โ€œanimals,โ€ urging the military to police American streets, and promising โ€œretributionโ€ in his second termโ€”I want my kids to see what it looks like to say no. Punk shows model that refusal in ways that are visceral and unforgettable.

Historically, punk has always been a thorn in the side of fascism. In 1970s Britain, bands like The Clash and Crass took on the National Front and Thatcherism with biting lyrics and community organizing. In the United States, Dead Kennedys mocked Reagan-era warmongering, while Black Flagโ€™s raw fury gave voice to alienation under neoliberal capitalism. Later, bands like Anti-Flag and Propagandhi explicitly championed antifascist and antiracist politics. These were not just bands with a messageโ€”they created spaces where kids could see that being against oppression wasnโ€™t fringe, it was necessary. Today, that spirit is alive and wellโ€”and I try to engage my kids with lyrics and the message regularly.

Compare that to whatโ€™s happening outside those walls. Trump has reiterated that the left is trying to destroy America, echoing language used by actual fascist leaders to justify censorship and violence. In states like Florida and Texas, anti- โ€œwokeโ€ laws have banned educators from teaching about systemic racism or gender identity. Trans kids are being denied health care, book bans are metastasizing, and vigilante-like action is risingโ€”often targeting the same communities celebrated in punk spaces.

This is not a neutral political moment. Raising children in it means making choices. I want them to know what solidarity looks like, what protest feels like, and how to recognize propaganda when they hear it. Punk showsโ€”often organized by people barely scraping by but still finding ways to create a safe, defiant communityโ€”offer that kind of moral education. They teach not just resistance but joy, creativity, and collective care.

Some might argue that punk is too angry, too confrontational for kids. But have you seen the news? Whatโ€™s โ€œtoo muchโ€ is letting my children grow up thinking this is normal: leaders praising dictators, mobs threatening school boards, and presidential candidates promising to hunt down those with whom they disagree. Iโ€™d rather they scream along with a band calling out fascism than sit quietly while the world burns. 

Luckily, many venues in our area are โ€œall agesโ€ and attended by an eclectic audience feeling the gravity of this American moment. You will see me and my kiddos throwing our heads around at Local 506 and Catโ€™s Cradle in Chapel Hill or The Ritz in Raleigh. Come join in the funโ€”all are welcome. Recently, we caught some West Coast thrashing at The Vera Project in Seattle. These venuesโ€”their audiences and the music erupting from themโ€”are, at once, ragged, honest, and lovely.

Punk, in all its imperfect, chaotic glory, is a reminder that another world is possibleโ€”and worth fighting for. Thatโ€™s the lesson I want my kids to learn now. Because by the time theyโ€™re old enough to vote, theyโ€™ll need not only the tools to recognize tyranny but the courage to defy it.

Dr. Nathan Boucher is an associate professor of public policy, nursing, and medicine at Duke University.