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Allies play instrumental roles in social movement organizations, yet sociologists undertheorize the unaggrieved’s mobilization and seldom explore the role of social group identity on movement participation. Challenging this undertheorization, I ask: Under what conditions do the unaggrieved join social movement organizations that fight sociopolitical changes that do not directly affect them? To answer this question, I leveraged the overturn of Roe v. Wade and interviewed 35 White, male volunteer pilots who fly people to obtain abortions and gender-affirming-care across state lines. Drawing on qualitative data, I introduce a multi-stage theory of the unaggrieved’s mobilization and argue that the unaggrieved mobilize under three distinct conditions: (1) political awareness and generalized concerns; (2) privilege awareness and cultural concerns; and (3) the perception of a valuable contribution. In offering this theoretical framework, I deepen our understanding of how the unaggrieved can become allies and help ameliorate inequities from which they have historically benefited.