Your Typical 'No Kings' Protesters

The freak cosplayers were out as well.

And you can now see why they call US a cult! They are the cult, look at these people, the Left will be absolutely LOST once Trump is gone.

The crazies have literally spent a decade not running for a thing, just running AGAINST Trump.
 
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Helena Montana.
Chicago
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More people attend a high school football game on any given Friday night in the fall across hundreds of campuses. Once again, a collection of blue freaks in a blue city means nothing.
 
Soros pays to bus a lot of these unemployed old ladies around. But, he's not the only commie billionaire; there is also this guy:



Who comes to mind in the following scenario? A wealthy, reclusive businessman with far-Left political leanings establishes a New York-based philanthropy that donates large sums of money to Leftist groups who act, at times violently, in the name of progressive social change. That would be George Soros, right? Well, that’s right.

But unfortunately, there’s another one. His name is Neville Singham. Like Soros, he helps bankroll the current disorder in our streets. Unlike Soros, who still clings to the myth that he supports an “open society,” Singham lives in China and is openly aligned with the Chinese Communist Party.

Singham is not nearly as well-known as Soros. But he should be. Since 2017, he’s headed a New York-based nonprofit network whose member organizations are overtly wedded to Marxist-Leninist principles of socialist revolution. Certain members of Congress want details. Obtaining them won’t be easy.

Who is Neville Singham, this international man of mystery? Why does he subsidize nonprofits that endorse trespassing and rioting to achieve their goals? Why has he chosen to live as an expatriate in Shanghai? A number of people in Washington, are seeking some answers. On July 10, 2024, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and then-Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., sent a letter to then-U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland requesting information on what the Department of Justice was doing to monitor Chinese government propaganda disseminated by U.S. nonprofits. The senators cited 18 Singham-supported organizations that may have violated the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) through a Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-connected media company. The effort yielded little if any useful information. Then again, plenty of information already is in plain sight.

Neville Roy Singham, now 71, was born in the U.S. to a Sri Lankan father and a Cuban mother. Raised mainly in Jamaica, he was in a sense destined for radicalism. His father, Archibald Singham, was a renowned Leftist political scientist who taught at Brooklyn College, was a resident scholar at the Martin Luther King Jr. Institute for Nonviolence, and served as an adviser to the UN on Third World development. His son Neville took to radicalism soon enough. At 17, he joined a Maoist labor group, the League of Revolutionary Black Workers, and found work at a Chrysler auto plant in Detroit. In time, he would be investigated by the FBI, which cited his background, emotional instability and activity in groups “inimical to the U.S.” Sometime after graduating from Howard University in 1978, he started an equipment-leasing consulting firm. Had he made peace with capitalism? Sort of.

In 1989, Singham created ThoughtWorks, a Chicago-based software consulting firm that incorporated in 1993. The company was profitable, attracting blue-chip clients such as Microsoft and Oracle. Yet he remained enamored of Leftist collectivism. At a media conference in 2008, he rationalized: “As a socialist, I believe the world should have access to the best ideas in software for free. My goal is a technically superior infrastructure to solve the world’s problems.” This grandiose declaration ignored the reality that nothing is free when doing business.

In this century, Singham, increasingly politically engaged, delegated his executive duties at ThoughtWorks while staying on as chairman. He sold his company stake in 2017 to a London-based, global private equity firm, Apax Partners, for $785 million. Though he remained far less wealthy than George Soros, he now was positioned to indulge his passion for socialist revolution.


So, these aren't 'grass roots uprisings of the common folk', they're full blown guerrilla war fronts.

Remember, ladies and germs, Communists and financiers are both corporatists.
 
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Soros pays to bus a lot of these unemployed old ladies around. But, he's not the only commie billionaire; there is also this guy:



Who comes to mind in the following scenario? A wealthy, reclusive businessman with far-Left political leanings establishes a New York-based philanthropy that donates large sums of money to Leftist groups who act, at times violently, in the name of progressive social change. That would be George Soros, right? Well, that’s right.

But unfortunately, there’s another one. His name is Neville Singham. Like Soros, he helps bankroll the current disorder in our streets. Unlike Soros, who still clings to the myth that he supports an “open society,” Singham lives in China and is openly aligned with the Chinese Communist Party.

Singham is not nearly as well-known as Soros. But he should be. Since 2017, he’s headed a New York-based nonprofit network whose member organizations are overtly wedded to Marxist-Leninist principles of socialist revolution. Certain members of Congress want details. Obtaining them won’t be easy.

Who is Neville Singham, this international man of mystery? Why does he subsidize nonprofits that endorse trespassing and rioting to achieve their goals? Why has he chosen to live as an expatriate in Shanghai? A number of people in Washington, are seeking some answers. On July 10, 2024, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and then-Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., sent a letter to then-U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland requesting information on what the Department of Justice was doing to monitor Chinese government propaganda disseminated by U.S. nonprofits. The senators cited 18 Singham-supported organizations that may have violated the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) through a Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-connected media company. The effort yielded little if any useful information. Then again, plenty of information already is in plain sight.

Neville Roy Singham, now 71, was born in the U.S. to a Sri Lankan father and a Cuban mother. Raised mainly in Jamaica, he was in a sense destined for radicalism. His father, Archibald Singham, was a renowned Leftist political scientist who taught at Brooklyn College, was a resident scholar at the Martin Luther King Jr. Institute for Nonviolence, and served as an adviser to the UN on Third World development. His son Neville took to radicalism soon enough. At 17, he joined a Maoist labor group, the League of Revolutionary Black Workers, and found work at a Chrysler auto plant in Detroit. In time, he would be investigated by the FBI, which cited his background, emotional instability and activity in groups “inimical to the U.S.” Sometime after graduating from Howard University in 1978, he started an equipment-leasing consulting firm. Had he made peace with capitalism? Sort of.

In 1989, Singham created ThoughtWorks, a Chicago-based software consulting firm that incorporated in 1993. The company was profitable, attracting blue-chip clients such as Microsoft and Oracle. Yet he remained enamored of Leftist collectivism. At a media conference in 2008, he rationalized: “As a socialist, I believe the world should have access to the best ideas in software for free. My goal is a technically superior infrastructure to solve the world’s problems.” This grandiose declaration ignored the reality that nothing is free when doing business.

In this century, Singham, increasingly politically engaged, delegated his executive duties at ThoughtWorks while staying on as chairman. He sold his company stake in 2017 to a London-based, global private equity firm, Apax Partners, for $785 million. Though he remained far less wealthy than George Soros, he now was positioned to indulge his passion for socialist revolution.


So, these aren't 'grass roots uprisings of the common folk', they're full blown guerrilla war fronts.

Remember, ladies and germs, Communists and financiers are both corporatists.

So the "No Kings" protestors are nothing more than useful idiots for the CCP. :laughing0301:

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An interviewer at the No Kings protest asks a woman “Is it a little bit homophobic to focus on the straights of Hormuz rather than the gays of Hormuz?”

The No Kings protester, completely serious, says “Yes, absolutely, I agree.”

:laughing0301:

 
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