
Earlier this week, I opened my press email expecting the usual updates, but instead found an invitation to attend a “No Kings” protest in New York City.
The rally, advertised as a grassroots demonstration, was in fact tied to organizations funded by George Soros’s Open Society Foundations (OSF).
Out of curiosity, I reached out for an interview with the event’s organizer. Unsurprisingly, I never received a reply.
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That silence only confirmed what the financial record already shows: Soros’s network thrives on operating in the shadows.
Since 2016, Soros’s OSF—now led by his son Alexander—has funneled more than $80 million into groups linked to extremist activity, according to the Capital Research Center.
While mainstream media paints OSF as a benevolent philanthropic engine, the truth is far darker.
These grants are not limited to think tanks or voter engagement. They extend to organizations that train activists in sabotage, property destruction, and even violent confrontation.
Consider the Center for Third World Organizing and its militant partner, the Ruckus Society.
Both groups, funded by OSF, were active during the 2020 riots that shut down major cities. Their “direct action” training included sabotage and urban disruption tactics that meet the FBI’s definition of domestic terrorism.
Another OSF grantee, the Sunrise Movement, endorsed the Antifa-linked “Stop Cop City” campaign in Atlanta. That effort has already left more than 40 activists facing domestic terrorism charges and 60 others indicted under Georgia’s racketeering laws.
OSF’s reach extends further. The foundation poured $18 million into the Movement for Black Lives, which later published a radical guide glorifying Hamas’s October 7 massacre in Israel.
The guide went as far as teaching “activists” how to create false identification, blockade infrastructure, and engineer economic sabotage.
Funding such material is not supporting free speech; rather, it is underwriting political violence.
Between 2016 and 2023, OSF granted more than $2.3 million to Al-Haq, a West Bank NGO accused of direct ties to the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a designated terrorist group.
In September 2025, the U.S. State Department formally sanctioned Al-Haq, declaring its work part of the “illegitimate targeting of Israel” at the International Criminal Court.
That means Soros’s dollars went directly to a group now blacklisted by the U.S. government.
Soros’s foundation has empowered movements whose agenda is destabilization, not reform. The invitation I received to a so-called protest was a reminder that the money behind these movements is foreign, coordinated, and destructive.
The post I Was Invited to a Soros-Funded Protest in New York appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.