(Washington Times) - There’s a solitary man at the
financial center of the Ferguson protest movement. No, it’s not victim Michael
Brown or Officer Darren Wilson. It’s not even the Rev. Al Sharpton, despite his
ubiquitous campaign on TV and the streets.
Rather, it’s liberal billionaire George Soros, who has built
a business empire that dominates across the ocean in Europe while forging a
political machine powered by nonprofit foundations that impacts American
politics and policy, not unlike what he did with MoveOn.org.
Mr. Soros spurred the Ferguson protest movement through
years of funding and mobilizing groups across the U.S., according to interviews
with key players and financial records reviewed by The Washington Times.
In all, Mr. Soros gave at least $33 million in one year to
support already-established groups that emboldened the grass-roots,
on-the-ground activists in Ferguson, according to the most recent tax filings
of his nonprofit Open Society Foundations.
The financial tether from Mr. Soros to the activist groups
gave rise to a combustible protest movement that transformed a one-day criminal
event in Missouri into a 24-hour-a-day national cause celebre.
“Our DNA includes a belief that having people participate in
government is indispensable to living in a more just, inclusive, democratic
society,” said Kenneth Zimmerman, director of Mr. Soros‘ Open Society
Foundations’ U.S. programs, in an interview with The Washington Times. “Helping
groups combine policy, research [and] data collection with community organizing
feels very much the way our society becomes more accountable.”
No strings attached
Mr. Zimmerman said OSF has been giving to these types of
groups since its inception in the early ‘90s, and that, although groups
involved in the protests have been recipients of Mr. Soros‘ grants, they were
in no way directed to protest at the behest of Open Society.
“The incidents, whether in Staten Island, Cleveland or
Ferguson, were spontaneous protests — we don’t have the ability to control or
dictate what others say or choose to say,” Mr. Zimmerman said. “But these
circumstances focused people’s attention — and it became increasingly evident
to the social justice groups involved that what a particular incident like
Ferguson represents is a lack of accountability and a lack of democratic
participation.”
Soros-sponsored organizations helped mobilize protests in
Ferguson, building grass-roots coalitions on the ground backed by a nationwide
online and social media campaign.
Other Soros-funded groups made it their job to remotely
monitor and exploit anything related to the incident that they could portray as
a conservative misstep, and to develop academic research and editorials to
disseminate to the news media to keep the story alive.
The plethora of organizations involved not only shared Mr.
Soros‘ funding, but they also fed off each other, using content and buzzwords
developed by one organization on another’s website, referencing each other’s
news columns and by creating a social media echo chamber of Facebook “likes”
and Twitter hashtags that dominated the mainstream media and personal online
newsfeeds.
Buses of activists from the Samuel Dewitt Proctor Conference
in Chicago; from the Drug Policy Alliance, Make the Road New York and Equal
Justice USA from New York; from Sojourners, the Advancement Project and Center
for Community Change in Washington; and networks from the Gamaliel Foundation —
all funded in part by Mr. Soros — descended on Ferguson starting in August and
later organized protests and gatherings in the city until late last month.
Broaden issue focus
All were aimed at keeping the media’s attention on the city
and to widen the scope of the incident to focus on interrelated causes — not
just the overpolicing and racial discrimination narratives that were
highlighted by the news media in August.
“I went to Ferguson in a quest to be in solidarity and stand
with the young organizers and affirm their leadership,” said Kassandra
Frederique, policy manager at the Drug Policy Alliance, which was founded by
Mr. Soros, and which receives $4 million annually from his foundation. She
traveled to Ferguson in October.
“We recognized this movement is similar to the work we’re
doing at DPA,” said Ms. Frederique. “The war on drugs has always been to
operationalize, institutionalize and criminalize people of color. Protecting
personal sovereignty is a cornerstone of the work we do and what this movement
is all about.”
Ms. Frederique works with Opal Tometi, co-creator of
#BlackLivesMatter — a hashtag that was developed after the killing of Trayvon
Martin in Florida — and helped promote it on DPA’s news feeds. Ms. Tometi runs
the Black Alliance for Just Immigration, a group to which Mr. Soros gave
$100,000 in 2011, according to the most recent of his foundation’s tax filings.
“I think #BlackLivesMatter’s success is because of
organizing. This was created after Trayvon Martin, and there has been sustained
organizing and conversations about police violence since then,” said Ms.
Frederique. “Its explosion into the mainstream recently is because it connects
all the dots at a time when everyone was lost for words. ‘Black Lives Matter’
is liberating, unapologetic and leaves no room for confusion.”
#BlackLivesMatter
With the backing of national civil rights organizations and
Mr. Soros‘ funding, “Black Lives Matter” grew from a hashtag into a social
media phenomenon, including a #BlackLivesMatter bus tour and march in
September.
“More than 500 of us have traveled from Boston, Chicago,
Columbus, Detroit, Houston, Los Angeles, Nashville, Portland, Tucson,
Washington, D.C., Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and other cities to support
the people of Ferguson and help turn a local moment into a national movement,”
wrote Akiba Solomon, a journalist at Colorlines, describing the event.
Colorlines is an online news site that focuses on race
issues and is published by Race Forward, a group that received $200,000 from
Mr. Soros’s foundation in 2011. Colorlines has published tirelessly on the
activities in Ferguson and heavily promoted the #BlackLivesMatter hashtag and
activities.
At the end of the #BlackLivesMatter march, organizers met
with civil rights groups like the Organization for Black Struggle and
Missourians Organizing for Reform and Empowerment to strategize their
operations moving forward, Ms. Solomon wrote. OBS and MORE are also funded by
Mr. Soros.
Mr. Soros gave $5.4 million to Ferguson and Staten Island
grass-roots efforts last year to help “further police reform, accountability
and public transparency,” the Open Society Foundations said in a blog post in
December. About half of those funds were earmarked to Ferguson, with the money
primarily going to OBS and MORE, the foundation said.
OBS and MORE, along with the Dream Defenders, established
the “Hands Up Coalition” — another so-called “grass-roots” organization in
Missouri, whose name was based on now-known-to-be-false claims that Brown had
his hands up before being shot. The Defenders were built to rally support and awareness
for the Trayvon Martin case and were funded by the Tides Foundation, another
recipient of Soros cash.
Hands Up Coalition has made it its mission to recruit and
organize youth nationwide to start local events in their communities — trying
to take Ferguson nationwide.
Years and weekends of ‘resistance’
Hands Up Coalition has dubbed 2015 as “The Year of
Resistance,” and its outreach program strongly resembles how President Obama’s
political action committee — Organizing for Action — rallies youth for its
causes, complete with a similarly designed Web page and call to action.
Mr. Soros, who made his fortune betting against the British
pound during the currency crisis in the early ‘90s, is a well-known supporter
of progressive-liberal causes and is a political donor to Mr. Obama’s
campaigns. He committed $1 million to Mr. Obama’s super PAC in 2012.
Mr. Soros‘ two largest foundations manage almost $3 billion
in assets per year, according to their most recent respective tax returns. The
Foundation to Promote Open Society managed $2.2 billion in assets in 2011, and
his Open Society Institute managed $685.9 million in 2012.
In comparison, David and Charles Koch, the billionaire
brothers whom liberals often call a threat to democracy — and worse — for their
conservative influence, had $308 million tied up in their foundation and
institute in 2011.
One of the organizations that Mr. Soros funds, and which
fueled the demonstrations in Ferguson, is the Gamaliel Foundation, a network of
grass-roots, interreligious and interracial organizations. Mr. Obama started
his career as a community organizer at a Gamaliel affiliate in Chicago.
The Rev. Traci Blackmon of Christ the King United Church of
Christ in Florissant, Missouri, which is part of the Gamaliel network, said in
one of the group’s webinars that clergy involved with Gamaliel must be
“protectors of the narrative” of what happened in Ferguson.
The Gamaliel affiliate in St. Louis — Metropolitan
Congregations United — organized the “Weekend of Resistance” in October, in
which clergy members from around the nation were called to come to Ferguson to
protest.
Clergy involvement
Representatives of Sojourners, a national evangelical
Christian organization committed “to faith in action for social justice,”
attended the weekend. The group received $150,000 from Mr. Soros in 2011.
Clergy representatives from the Samuel Dewitt Proctor
Conference, where the Rev. Jeremiah Wright serves as a trustee, also showed up.
Mr. Wright was Mr. Obama’s pastor in Chicago before some of his racially
charged sermons, including the phrase “God damn America,” forced Mr. Obama to
distance himself. SDPC received $250,000 from Mr. Soros in 2011.
During Gamaliel’s weekend protest event, Sunday was deemed
“Hands Up Sabbath,” where clergy were asked to speak out about racial issues,
using packets and talking points prepared for them by another religion-based
community organizing group, PICO.
PICO is also supported by the Open Society Foundations,
according to its website.
The weekend concluded Monday, when clergy members were asked
to lead in acts of civil disobedience, prompting many of them to go to jail in
the hopes of gaining media attention.
It worked, as imagery of clergy members down on their hands
and knees in front of police dominated the mainstream news cycle that day — two
months after Brown’s shooting.
“After the initial shooting, we were all hit in the face
with how blatant racism really is,” said the Rev. Susan Sneed, a Gamaliel
organizer who helped stage the October weekend event. “We began quickly hearing
from our other affiliates offering support.”
At the end of August, Gamaliel had a large organizational
meeting to discuss its Ferguson strategy, Ms. Sneed said.
It had its affiliates in New York and California handling
the St. Louis Twitter feed and Facebook page, helped in correcting any
inaccurate stories in the press and promoted their events, she said.
“When we started marching down the street, saying, ‘hands
up, don’t shoot,’ those images reached all over the world,” said Ms. Sneed, referring
to the moment she realized Ferguson was going to become a movement. “The
Twitter images, Facebook posts of burning buildings — it’s everywhere, and the
imagery is powerful. And the youth — the youth is so engaged. They’ve found a
voice in Ferguson.”
National activists descend
Larry Fellows III, 29, a Missouri native, did find his voice
in the chaos of Ferguson with the help of outside assistance backed by Mr.
Soros.
Mr. Fellows is co-founder of the Millennial Activists
United, a key source of video and stories developed in Ferguson by youth
activists used to inspire other groups nationally.
Mr. Fellows explained how he started his organization in an
interview with the American Civil Liberties Union (another Soros-backed entity
that sent national representatives to Missouri) in November.
“Initially, it would just be that we would show up for
protests, and the next day we’d clean up the streets. A lot of the same people
were out at the protests and going out to lunch and talking about what was
happening. That became a cycle until a lot of us figured out we needed to have
a strategy,” Mr. Fellows explained to the ACLU, which posted the interview in
its blog.
“Then a lot of organizers from across the country started to
come in to help us do the planning and do the strategizing. That helped us
start doing it on our own and planning out actions and what our narratives were
going to be,” he said.
MAU has listed on its website that it has partnered with
Gamaliel network churches. They’ve also received training on civil disobedience
from the Advancement Project — which was given a $500,000 grant from Mr. Soros
in 2013 “to build a fair and just, multi-racial democracy in America through
litigation, community organizing support, public policy reform, and strategic communications,”
according to the Foundation’s website.
The Advancement Project, based in Washington, also arranged
the meeting between community organizers in Ferguson and Mr. Obama last month
to brief him on the situation in Ferguson and to set up a task force that
examines trust between police and minority communities.
In addition, the Advancement Project has also dedicated some
of its staff to lead organizations in Ferguson, like the Don’t Shoot Coalition,
another grass-roots group that preaches the same message, links to the same
Facebook posts and “likes” the same articles as DPA, ACLU, Hands Up Coalition,
OBS, MORE and others.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/jan/14/george-soros-funds-ferguson-protests-hopes-to-spur/#ixzz3OtMbn2LL
Source:http://www.teaparty.org/george-soros-funds-ferguson-protests-hopes-spur-civil-action-77308/
Comments
Communists, Nazis and Jihadists used violence
and violent demonstrations to produce fear in the opposition. The Mafia used violence and Unions used
violence and intimidation to gain “compliance”. Bribery and extortion were used
by all of these as appropriate. Obama uses chaos and blitzkrieg to further his
agenda. The UN uses outlandish lies to
promote their agenda. ACORN and the
“race-baters” use lawsuits to extract extortion payments. Soros uses all of
them to promote his agenda. He and the
other “puppet masters” use our largest financial and educational institutions, 10,000
non-profits, Philanthropic Foundations, political parties and the media to
advance their agendas.
America functions best as a free enterprise
meritocracy without these parasites.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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