‘No Kings’ Rallies — Paid For By A King

Mar 30, 2026 - 16:28
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‘No Kings’ Rallies — Paid For By A King

Eight million people just took to the streets to stop a king who does not exist.

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They say they are protesting tyranny. But if you look at who’s actually holding the megaphone — and more importantly, who’s signing the checks — this grassroots movement starts looking a lot less grassroots and a lot more like a sophisticated and coordinated operation by Hollywood elites and radical activists having public meltdowns demanding labor militancy.

The real story isn’t the useful idiots on the streets. It’s the apparent $3 billion web of funding tied to a tech tycoon living in Shanghai and a wedding-turned-mysterious summit in Jamaica.

Who are these shadowy figures funding the chaos? Why are America’s enemies cheering from the sidelines?

These people are not turning out because they suddenly oppose centralized government. You think Democrats are anti-centralized government? Against a bigger federal government run by the executive branch?

No way.

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Presidents Obama and Biden radically expanded the power of the executive branch. Funny, there were no protests then.

They’re also not turning out in the streets because they oppose an intervention such as what’s going on in Iran or because they oppose tyrants. They were fine with Barack Obama’s interventions in Libya, Syria, and in the drone wars. They were totally fine with Joe Biden’s funding of the war in Ukraine.

They’re not anti-tyranny, the “No Kings” people; they’re perfectly pro-tyranny in foreign countries, and they tolerate their friends’ tyranny at home.

We all know the real reason: A lot of people hate President Trump, and they hate the American system.

How do they get this many people organized?

A lot of money. Where exactly is that money coming from?

Fox News reported:

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.

So there’s a communist living in China who is funneling hundreds of millions of dollars into various protest groups.

Fox News also noted:

As far-left American activists flood Cuba to support its flailing communist regime, U.S. officials have opened a sprawling investigation into an anti-America, pro-China nonprofit network forged during a wedding celebration in late February 2017, off Runaway Bay on Jamaica’s northern coast.

There, beneath a canopy of palm trees, an elite cadre of activists, intellectuals, celebrities, political organizers and comrades in a global Marxist-Leninist-Maoist movement assembled to celebrate the “Revolutionary Love” of two luminaries, both 62 at the time: Neville Roy Singham, an American-born tech tycoon living in Shanghai, and Jodie Evans, a red-haired veteran activist and co-founder of CodePink Women for Peace.

Like the opening scene of “The Godfather,” where powerful families consolidate power, the wedding celebration was about much more than the union of two people.

Over four days of dancing, lectures and late-night conversations in venues from the Flavor Beach Bar to Sharkey’s Seafood, celebrating the bond of “Roy and Jodie,” alliances were formed that would shape protests, unrest and political agitation over the next decade, from the fiery 2020 scenes in Minneapolis to demonstrations today supporting the regimes in Cuba and Iran.

Apparently, Singham has pushed some $278 million into organizations that sow discord in the United States.

None of these protests are innocent. They are not happening by accident. It takes an awful lot of money to make this magic happen.

Singham said in 2025: “If we want to therefore have a new world order that is based on multilateralism that President XI and CPC and China have proposed, we have to undo the ideological damage that has been done by the narrative of World War II. … China has a very important role, and we in this forum have a very important role, that to envision a new multi-polarity order requires that, quite frankly, this deconstruction or restoration, a history of what really happened.”

He said there should be a multipolar world order with China and Russia as leading forces and that we need to rewrite the history of World War II in order to achieve this new world order.

Outside forces are trying to destroy America — and President Trump.

And it’s our job to make sure that does not happen.

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Fibis I am just an average American. My teen years were in the late 70s and I participated in all that that decade offered. Started working young, too young. Then I joined the Army before I graduated High School. I spent 25 years in, mostly in Infantry units. Since then I've worked in information technology positions all at small family owned companies. At this rate I'll never be a tech millionaire. When I was young I rode horses as much as I could. I do believe I should have been a cowboy. I'm getting in the saddle again by taking riding lessons and see where it goes.