
Beijing could not be happier at how well-funded “No Kings” is. So who in the world is paying for these destructive therapy sessions?
Read on, according to a former WSJ reporter, Asra Nomani.
A network of about 500 groups with an estimated $3 billion in combined annual revenues is behind the coordinated nationwide “No Kings” protest Saturday, including communist groups who are using the day to call for a “revolution,” according to a Fox Digital News investigation.
According to a copy of the permit for the “flagship” march in St. Paul, Minn., Indivisible, a national well-heeled Democratic political advocacy organization funded by billionaire George Soros, is the lead coordinator for the protest.
But Fox News Digital has also identified key participation by a network of radical socialist and communist organizations funded by Neville Roy Singham, an American tech tycoon and avowed communist living in China.
Over nearly a decade, Singham has financed a constellation of activist institutions that promote revolutionary socialist politics and frequently collaborate in protest campaigns, including the People’s Forum in New York, the Party for Socialism and Liberation, the ANSWER Coalition and CodePink, whose co-founder Jodie Evans is married to Singham. These groups work closely with the Freedom Road Socialist Organization.
Dark Money
Ms. Nomani also reported on the constellation of organizations linked to Mr. Singham and described an event he co-sponsored last year along with “the Shanghai-based East China Normal University, and administered by the Chinese Communist Party.”
The university features a School of Marxism and teaches ‘Marxist journalism.’ Singham… and conference attendees closed the conference, standing at attention as ‘The Internationale,’ a communist anthem played, attendees pumping their fists in the air in solidarity.” Ms. Nomani continued:
According to Fox News Digital, which has identified at least 200 organizations in Singham’s network of about 2,000 organizations that directly work on propaganda that parrots the anti-American messaging of the Chinese Communist Party, but is dramatically homegrown in digital shops from New York City to Los Angeles.
The investigation found that three Singham-linked U.S. nonprofits sent a total of $9.1 million in seven payments to a pro-China propaganda firm, Shanghai Maku Cultural Communications Co. Ltd. The payments haven’t been reported before…
Eleven U.S. nonprofit organizations form a core hub of the work that pumps pro-China, anti-America propaganda into the world, with a total of about $401 million flowing from Singham and his network into these organizations. The organizations didn’t respond to requests for comment…That network has matured into a transnational protest and media machine… its infrastructure is visible on American streets, coordinated, funded and amplified by groups built quietly, deliberately and in plain sight. Singham and Evans didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Would readers, wonders a perplexed James Freeman in the WSJ, not find this subject highly relevant in current coverage of protests in the United States?
Yet for some odd reason Mr. Singham’s name is now extremely hard to find in stories from large U.S. media outlets that often purport to be highly concerned about “dark money” in U.S. politics.
One would think, continues Mr. Freeman, this is a news story when events presented as opposition to kings are so supportive of commissars.





