In the late 1700s, D.C. didn’t exist as much more than parts of Maryland and Virginia. But when George Washington chose a site along the Potomac River as the home of the young nation’s new capital city, both states gave up a bit of their land in order to create the place we now call home.

But much as Virginia took its portion of the capital back in 1846, there have longstanding calls for all but the city’s federal core to be subsumed back into Maryland. Proponents have claimed that retrocession would be the easiest solution to the city’s lack of voting rights—instead of the more controversial alternative of statehood, D.C. residents would join Maryland and gain all the democratic privileges they’ve long been denied.

Easy as the solution might seem, I’ve never much seen someone make it their battle cry or try and organize a campaign around it. Until now, apparently. Over the weekend, I stumbled across a curious bumper sticker, pictured above, that seemed to hint that D.C. and Maryland belong together. Unless I’m missing something—and I might be—the sticker implicitly sides with retroceding D.C. into Maryland. And if you’re wondering, the pickup truck bearing the sticker had D.C. tags on it.

If anyone else has any brilliant theories or explanations, I’d love to hear them.