As you may be well aware, protesters are descending on the World Bank and International Monetary Fund campus near the White House this weekend to protest the meetings of the Group of Seven. According to Reuters, economic officials are focusing on two things: high oil prices (and how they may be here for the long-run) and China’s stubbornness to revalue the yuan. And U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow is expected to be pressured “to cut the U.S. budget deficit and lift household savings.”

Outside, World Bank/IMF activists are trumpeting their top priorities — topping their concerns is debt relief for debt-ridden developing nations. (More from the Post …) This particular concern has been at the top of the agenda for the past few years. We’re sure it’s difficult coming up with new protest slogan material. Options, for the most part, are all tapped out or are simply recycled from previous years or previous protests. You can only do so much with the “Si Se Puede”s, the “No Justice, No Peace”s, and all the variations of “Hey, Hey, Ho, Ho …”s.

But this year, protesters have two new pieces of material to work with. The first one is self-evident: former Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz now safely installed as the incoming World Bank president. And the second is slightly obscure, but protesters have been clever enough to pick up on it and adapt it for their use: “Save the children, not just the duck. G-7: drop the debt, life’s just not just about the buck.”

The duck? Yes, that duck nesting in a Pennsylvania Avenue sidewalk planter outside the Treasury Department, which the Secret Service has gone out of its way to give federal protection. (Hat tip to Alphanumeric, who informed us of the new slogan by posting this photo of said duck in DCist Photos via Flickr.)