In trucks, vans and RVs, hundreds of people converged Saturday in southern Texas to rally against what they say is a migrant "invasion" and to demand tough new controls at the US border with Mexico.
Scrawled on the side of one of the vehicles reaching Quemado -- population 162 -- were the words "Join the God Fight."
The convoy decided to gather in this tiny town along the Rio Grande river, which forms the natural border between the United States and Mexico, as debate swirls again about how to address record high migrant crossings.
Hundreds of thousands of people from Central and South America, and beyond, have waded across the river in recent month in hopes of better lives in the United States.
But their huge numbers have become a galvanizing issue, especially ahead of the November presidential election, with Republicans in Congress blocking additional US aid to Ukraine and Israel over demands that President Joe Biden's administration does more to stop the flow.
And so it is at tiny Quemado that the activist group calling itself "We the People" -- the first words in the preamble to the US Constitution -- decided to meet and make their anger known.
One of the event's organizers, suggesting holy backing for their cause, has called those massing here "God's Army."
Under the slogan "Take our border back," these activists, traveling in convoys from the across the United States, have been arriving in towns along the border to camp -- and protest -- this weekend.
"Migration on the border is out of control," 43-year-old Robyn Forzano, who was guarding the entrance to the Quemado ranch where protesters were meeting, told AFP.
"We're being invaded and, you know, ultimately we have to be able to control what's happening," he said, echoing Republican leaders and conservative media pundits in recent weeks.
Many arriving vehicles bore signs supporting former president Donald Trump, the Republican favorite in this fall's election, or blasting his likely opponent, incumbent Biden.
"Heaven has walls, hell has open borders," read one activist's sign.
"The people in Mexico, they are wonderful, beautiful people -- love them," Marty Bird, a 73-year-old Trump supporter, told AFP in the nearby town of Eagle Pass.
"But it seems like once they come here... they become militants. You know, they become angry. They do robbery, burglaries," he claimed.
Eagle Pass, about 20 miles (30 kilometers) from Quemado, has become the epicenter of a prickly conflict between Texas Governor Greg Abbott, a Republican, and the Biden administration.
The federal government is suing Abbott for taking control of a park that includes an access ramp to the river, and for laying barbed wire along the riverbank.
In mid-January, the Biden administration complained that Texas national guardsmen had prevented federal border police from reaching the river to try to rescue three migrants who ultimately drowned.
Texas has rejected the accusation.
Biden has taken the case all the way to the US Supreme Court, which has authorized the border police to cut the barbed wire.
But a defiant Abbott has ordered more fencing to be erected, and has garnered support from Republican governors around the country, who have sent their own guardsmen or resources to the border.
"That river today is a disaster zone," Jessie Fuentes, who owns a kayak rental business near the Rio Grande, told journalists. "It is becoming a military base."
He added: "Certain individuals or certain groups claiming to be an 'Army of God' are coming to our community to spread hate and to spread dissension.
"And I'm troubled by that, because this is not who we are."