The back of the card reads
“9,296 pages document 30,573 false or misleading claims by Donald Trump from his first day in office, 2017, to his final day on January 20, 2020, when Joe Biden was sworn in as the country’s next president. All that verbiage is 53" thick, weighs 52 pounds, and it started like this.
The dissolution of the Delaware College of Art & Design, to whom Lead Graffiti had donated 100s of design books over the past decade, brought an invitation to reclaim them. We found a few, which brought us another interesting find—a blank Coptic-stitched book with a spine about 36 inches wide bound by Ema Ishii Holdredge for her BFA show at the Corcoran School of Art in 2008. That book haunted us for several weeks, and we decided it was too audacious not to give it a Lead Graffiti shot. For a while, we pondered how to fill a several thousand-page book with content that made a serious point.
The notion of the presidential untruths came to mind, so maybe there was some documentation we could “borrow?” Sure enough, in a few Safari minutes, we found a downloadable PDF from The Washington Post that we could massage into a typographic form we could use. We were off. Ray undertook the ink-jet printing of the pages, folding and inserting the red cover-weight sheets for structural support, and gathering and punching the folds for sewing. Jill did 99.8% of the sewing.
At a 302United gathering, we encouraged attendees to give the book a stroke. Shown at right is the head of the Delaware ACLU, who has excellent technique.”