BATON ROUGE, LA – What began as a modest May Day protest against President Donald Trump on the steps of the Louisiana State Capitol quickly spiraled into a full-blown showdown over the diminishing size of Raising Cane’s chicken fingers.
Witnesses say the protest’s original mission—opposing “authoritarianism, inequality, and bad policy”—lost steam after one protester held up their Cane’s box and asked, “Since when are the strips smaller than the toast?” Within minutes, chants of “No justice, no peace!” were drowned out by “Make Cane’s strips huge again!”
“I came here to demand social reform,” said one confused marcher. “But honestly, I’ve been holding back rage about Cane’s finger shrinkage for months. It felt good to finally say it out loud.”
Several demonstrators held up handmade signs, including “Our Strips, Our Future,” and “Don’t Gaslight Me, That Strip Got Smaller.” A group briefly tried to redirect the focus back to political issues, but the crowd had already migrated to the nearby Raising Cane’s location to continue the protest.
Local media dubbed the protest “The Great Strip Uprising,” and said it’s the most passionate Baton Rouge has been since someone tried to ban drive-thru daiquiri stores.
