“Timeline of a deep state hit:The WaPo helpfully provides two anonymous sources to compound the dastardly illegal order delivered by an incompetent Secretary of War...A) a JSOC kill strike is ordered on an authorized target. Not a capture strike, a kill strike - President Obama was quite fond of them btw - 500+ to his name, including Americans.
B) the story is leaked. A leak from JSOC? Probably not - the leak is probably closer to the SECWAR’s office in the Pentagon. The Washington Post begins writing the story.
C) a Soros-funded NGO puts billboards up encouraging military personnel to report unlawful orders… although there are no unlawful orders identified.
D) out of nowhere, the Seditious Six - which includes one presidential hopeful and one former IC member who had direct involvement in the original attempt to destroy Trump - delivers to social media a “don’t give up the ship” video - a public service announcement to all personnel to refuse unlawful orders.
*** the video was funded and produced a Soros funded NGO.
E) Senator Slotkin, the former CIA ghoul, goes on the news and is very careful to state that she can’t identify any unlawful orders that have been given.
F) boom, the WaPo delivers the story claiming unlawful orders.
G) Friday evening, everyone on the left hits social media - with paid amplification - about the unlawful orders.
H) the Sunday shows will be filled with calls for war crimes charges, impeachments, and resignations.
All a coincidence, right? None of it was coordinated, right?
Not all civil wars happen on the battlefield.”
Is there any way to verify the WaPo's charges? ❓
Is there any charge against the 'Seditious Six'? ❓
Was all of this a planned operation? ❓
It sort of feels like a color revolution 🏴☠️ . . . . . . . . ❓
.
| The Most Enigmatic Figure Of Our Time |
| George Soros |
| Introduction by [F] In the shadowed corridors of global power, where finance intertwines with ideology and philanthropy masks ambition, George Soros emerges as a spectral force—neither wholly villain nor unalloyed hero, but an architect of flux whose life defies simple categorization. Born György Schwartz in 1930 amid the gathering storm of Hungarian antisemitism, Soros survived the Nazi occupation by assuming a false identity, an early lesson in adaptability that would define his trajectory. Escaping communist Hungary in 1947, he arrived in London as a penniless émigré, laboring as a railway porter and nightclub waiter while absorbing the philosophy of Karl Popper at the London School of Economics. Popper's concept of the "open society"—a realm of fallible truths, testable ideas, and resistance to totalitarianism—became Soros's lodestar, yet it would evolve into a tool for both liberation and disruption. Soros's ascent was meteoric and merciless. In 1956, he crossed the Atlantic to New York, honing his craft in arbitrage and European securities before launching his Quantum Fund in 1973. By 1992, dubbed "the man who broke the Bank of England," he netted $1 billion shorting the British pound, a coup that shattered economies but burnished his legend as a market sorcerer. His fortune, ballooning to over $40 billion, funded the Open Society Foundations (OSF), ostensibly a bulwark against closed societies, yet ensnared in webs of controversy: from currency manipulations that toppled Asian economies in 1997 to allegations of engineering "color revolutions" in Eastern Europe and beyond. Critics, from Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad to Hungarian autocrat Viktor Orbán, decry him as a puppeteer of chaos, funding NGOs that sow discord under the guise of democracy. Supporters hail his $32 billion in grants—bolstering dissidents in apartheid South Africa, Roma rights in Europe, and drug policy reform worldwide—as a defiant stand against oppression. Yet enigma cloaks Soros in layers of paradox. A Holocaust survivor's son who posed as a Christian godson to evade deportation, he later reflected on 1944 as "the happiest year of my life," a remark twisted into antisemitic calumnies accusing him of Nazi collaboration. A self-avowed atheist and market reflexivist, he critiques capitalism's excesses while embodying its apex predator. His funding of progressive DAs like Alvin Bragg and Larry Krasner has inflamed debates over "soft-on-crime" policies amid urban crime spikes, while his geopolitical maneuvers—from Ukraine's Orange Revolution to anti-Brexit campaigns—blur the line between altruism and interference. Lawsuits shadow him: a 2002 French insider trading conviction (upheld in 2011), a $10 billion defamation suit from mining magnate Beny Steinmetz in 2017, and ex-girlfriend Adriana Ferreyr's $50 million abuse claims in 2011. Unresolved specters linger—ties to USAID, alleged CIA collaborations via WikiLeaks cables, and whispers of biolab funding in Ukraine—fueling a maelstrom of conspiracy where fact and fiction entwine. Soros is no mere financier; he is a philosopher-trader, wielding reflexivity—the idea that perceptions shape reality—as both scalpel and sledgehammer. At 95, semi-retired yet omnipresent through son Alex, he embodies our era's central riddle: Can one man's vision of openness forge utopia, or does it inexorably birth the fractures it seeks to heal? In an age of polarized truths, Soros stands as the ultimate mirror—reflecting our fears of unchecked power, our hopes for untrammeled freedom, and the eternal tension between the two. His life, a tapestry of survival, speculation, and subversion, compels us to confront: Is he the midwife of progress or the harbinger of unraveling? The enigma endures, as inscrutable as the markets he once bent to his will. |
| 10 Major Controversies Surrounding Soros | |||
| # | Controversy | Description | Key Sources |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Nazi Collaboration Claims | Accusations he aided Nazis in 1944; based on distorted 60 Minutes interview, debunked as antisemitic trope. | Wiki |
| 2 | Black Wednesday (1992) | Shorted GBP, earned $1B, forced UK out of ERM; seen as economic warfare. | Wiki |
| 3 | Asian Financial Crisis (1997) | Speculation against baht/ringgit blamed for regional collapse; Mahathir called him criminal. | Wiki |
| 4 | Insider Trading Conviction (2002) | Fined €2.2M by French court, upheld 2011; Soros calls it political. | Wiki |
| 5 | Funding "Soros DAs" | $40M+ to elect progressive prosecutors; tied to crime surges in multiple cities. | NPR |
| 6 | Color Revolutions | OSF accused of orchestrating uprisings in Georgia, Ukraine, Kyrgyzstan. | Wiki |
| 7 | Antisemitic Conspiracy Theories | Portrayed as global puppet-master; led to 2018 pipe-bomb attempt. | BBC |
| 8 | Hungarian "Stop Soros" Laws | Orbán's 2018 campaign forced OSF out of Budapest. | Wiki |
| 9 | Election Interference Claims | $23M against Bush 2004; accused of funding BLM, caravans, anti-Trump lawfare. | AP |
| 10 | Steinmetz $10B Lawsuit (2017) | Accused of sabotaging Guinea mining deals over Israel grudge. | ToI |
| Timeline – 33 Major Events (w/Unresolved Aspects) | ||||
| Year | Event | Description | Unresolved Aspect | Src |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1930 | Birth | Born György Schwartz, Budapest | — | W |
| 1944 | Nazi occupation survival | Poses as Christian; later calls it “happiest year” | Persistent Nazi-collaborator libel | W |
| 1947 | Flees to London | Studies under Karl Popper at LSE | — | W |
| 1956 | Moves to New York | Starts Wall Street career | — | W |
| 1969 | Double Eagle Fund | Precursor to Quantum | — | W |
| 1973 | Founds Quantum Fund | Offshore hedge fund | Early backers still secret | W |
| 1979 | First philanthropy | Black SA scholarships | — | W |
| 1984 | First OSF in Hungary | Starts Eastern Europe work | — | W |
| 1988 | Société Générale probe | Insider-trading investigation begins | Conviction still contested | W |
| 1992 | Black Wednesday | Earns $1B breaking Bank of England | Economic sabotage debate | W |
| 1997 | Asian Financial Crisis | Blamed for regional collapse | Degree of culpability | W |
| 2004 | $23M against Bush | Largest single-election donation then | Precedent for future meddling | W |
| 2011 | Ferreyr lawsuit | Ex-girlfriend sues for $50M | Personal conduct questions | W |
| 2015 | Russia bans OSF | Labels it “undesirable” | Ongoing foreign-agent stigma | W |
| 2017 | Steinmetz $10B suit | Guinea mining sabotage claim | Motive & influence unclear | ToI |
| 2017 | Transfers $18B to OSF | Largest single philanthropy gift ever | Protest-funding trails | W |
| 2018 | Pipe-bomb attempt | Targeted by far-right extremist | Conspiracy fallout | BBC |
| 2018 | Hungary “Stop Soros” laws | Forced OSF out of Budapest | Authoritarian backlash | W |
| 2020 | BLM funding myths | Falsely accused of paying rioters | Violence linkage persists | AP |
| 2023 | Indirect Bragg funding | Color of Change → Manhattan DA | Judicial interference claims | NPR |
| 2025 | Trump demands RICO probe | Calls for charges over protest funding | Potential prosecution open | NYT |
| Final Chapter: The Anti-American and Anti-Constitutionalist Shadow George Soros’s $32 billion Open Society empire has systematically funded the erosion of borders, impartial justice, and electoral integrity—core pillars of the U.S. constitutional order. His backing of radical prosecutors (Bragg, Gascón, etc.) correlates with historic crime waves; his NGOs teach and finance mass-migration logistics; his political arms pour nine-figure sums into one party while his media allies silence dissent. From currency crashes he profited from to revolutions he bankrolled, the pattern is consistent: destabilize, then reshape in the image of a borderless, post-national “open society.” At 95, with son Alex now in control, the project accelerates. The Soros legacy is not philanthropy—it is the most sophisticated, best-funded assault on national sovereignty and constitutional rule in modern history. |
| Disclaimer Content compiled from public sources. Reader must verify claims independently. Not an endorsement of unproven conspiracy theories; only documented patterns and unresolved controversies are presented. |
| References (compact) | |||
| Date | Item | URL | Desc |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025-11-17 | Wikipedia Main | en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Soros | Bio |
| 2025-11-26 | Conspiracy Theories | Wiki conspiracies | Myths |
| 2019-09-06 | BBC Profile | BBC | Bogeyman |
| 2023-04-06 | NPR DA Funding | NPR | Bragg |
| 2024-04-11 | AP BLM Myths | AP | Protests |
| 2025-09-25 | NYT DOJ Probe | NYT | Investigation |