Billionaire Elites Bankroll Leftist Uprising
A carefully orchestrated wave of so-called “grassroots” protests erupted under the banner of "No Kings" during a nationwide “day of defiance,” but behind the chants and mass mobilization lies a dark money empire bankrolled by ultra-wealthy progressive elites. Over $114.8 million has flowed from the Arabella Advisors network—a web of shadowy nonprofits funded by George Soros, Hansjörg Wyss, Bill Gates, and Mark Zuckerberg—directly into the hands of the very groups fueling this nationwide unrest. These aren’t spontaneous uprisings; they’re professionally executed operations coordinated by Indivisible, a leftist activist group led by Democratic insiders Ezra Levin and Leah Greenberg, and joined by an army of taxpayer-funded partners like the ACLU and CHIRLA. Astonishingly, while Soros-backed groups stoke urban chaos—some even linked to violent "Stop Cop City" riots in Atlanta—tens of millions in state and federal grants continue to prop them up, effectively making American taxpayers unknowing financiers of anti-government street theater. With official protest booklets, celebrity endorsements, and foreign billionaires pulling the strings, the “No Kings” movement showcases how the activist Left has industrialized protest and
Bandaranaike's husband became prime minister of Ceylon in 1956 and was assassinated three years later. In the election that followed, Bandaranaike's party was victorious—making her the world's first female prime minister. She headed two coalition governments and served again as prime minister when she was appointed by her daughter, Chandrika Kumaratunga, who was elected president in 1994. While in office, Bandaranaike promoted a new constitution that changed the country's name to what?
Observed in New York state, Verrazano Day commemorates the discovery of New York Harbor by the Italian navigator
Exquisite corpse is an exercise in which a collection of words or images is assembled by several participants, each of whom adds to a composition by either following a predetermined sequence—such as adjective-noun-adverb-verb-article-adjective-noun—or by looking at the end of the previous entry. The name of the game is derived from the phrase that French Surrealists created when they first played it in 1925: "Le cadavre exquis boira le vin nouveau," which means what?
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