Posted on 10/19/2025 7:56:15 AM PDT by MtnClimber
The so-called “No Kings” protest sweeping the nation, which is organizing nationwide demonstrations on October 18, 2025, across many major cities, is not a spontaneous cry for democracy but the latest orchestrated campaign by Indivisible, a network built by former congressional staffers and funded through George Soros’ Open Society empire. Founded in 2016 by Leah Greenberg and Ezra Levin, Indivisible began as a viral Google Doc that promised to teach progressives how to resist Donald Trump. Within weeks, the founders had transformed it into a professionalized operation flush with cash from the same sources that have quietly shaped left-wing activism for decades.
At first glance, the No Kings movement appears to be a grassroots outpouring against the idea of unchecked executive power. Its slogans, hashtags, and glossy materials suggest a decentralized coalition of concerned citizens. Yet a closer look at its architecture reveals a well-oiled political machine, operating with precision and discipline that only substantial institutional backing can provide. Behind the chants of “No one is above the law” lies a coordinated effort to delegitimize the duly elected president and extend the influence of an elite ideological class that sees itself as the guardian of democracy.
The two figures at the center of this operation, Leah Greenberg and Ezra Levin, are anything but amateurs. Greenberg’s career trajectory reads like a blueprint for manufacturing a domestic color revolution. Six years after earning her degree in international relations, she held an advisory position in the State Department. She was a Rosenthal Fellow, trained and groomed within a pipeline funded by the Bloombergs and Ford Foundation through the Partnership for Public Service. That same network of philanthropic influence has long been intertwined with the Rockefeller-originated Trilateral Commission. This is no coincidence. It represents the quiet integration of bureaucratic expertise with activist energy, converting public institutions into training grounds for political agitation.
Greenberg’s mentor, Tom Perriello, was not just a congressman but also an executive director at the Open Society Foundations. During their overlapping tenure at the State Department, Perriello served as Special Representative for the Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, while Greenberg held an advisory post. The connection is critical: Perriello went on to run Open Society Foundations’ US operations, and Indivisible soon after received generous funding from that same network. Perriello’s shift from public office to private influence mirrored the very trajectory that defines the modern activist elite. What began as a movement of congressional aides opposing Trump has become a vehicle for a broader campaign to reshape the American political order.
Ezra Levin, Greenberg’s husband and co-founder, played the role of the public face. Having worked as Deputy Policy Director under Representative Lloyd Doggett of Texas, Levin possessed the charm and communication skills needed to sell the movement to the media. His tone, earnest, intellectual, and disarming, was perfect for a generation of journalists eager to frame Indivisible as the liberal mirror of the Tea Party. Yet, unlike the Tea Party, Indivisible was never truly grassroots. Its launch was accompanied by the rapid influx of donor-advised funds and Open Society grants. Millions of dollars flowed from entities such as the Fund for a Better Future, a nonprofit connected to Sergey Brin that also bankrolled the “Build Back Better” campaign in 2020. In short order, Indivisible became less a citizens’ movement and more an NGO-driven campaign arm of the Democratic Party.
The No Kings protest is the latest manifestation of this machine. Its partners list, published proudly on its website, reads like a directory of Soros-funded organizations. Among the most prominent are the ACLU, MoveOn, Common Cause, Democracy Forward, Public Citizen, and the League of Women Voters—all fixtures of the Democratic Party’s institutional left. Others, such as Greenpeace USA, National Nurses United, and Voto Latino, are long-standing allies in progressive coalition politics. Still others, like Stand Up America, Our Revolution, and NextGen America, directly trace their origins to figures like Tom Steyer and Bernie Sanders. To call this a coalition of “independent voices” is disingenuous; it is a synchronized choir of organizations that rely on overlapping funding pipelines, shared data infrastructure, and unified messaging strategies.
The illusion of spontaneity is central to the operation’s success. Indivisible learned early that Americans distrust top-down movements. The organization therefore brands each campaign as decentralized, inviting volunteers to form local chapters with the appearance of autonomy. Yet the branding, talking points, and coordination are directed from the top. As with No Kings, major policy themes, such as “defending democracy” or “holding leaders accountable”, are crafted centrally and distributed through digital toolkits, media appearances, and online organizing platforms. In this way, Indivisible achieves the scale of a mass movement while maintaining the control of a political consultancy.
The ties between Indivisible and the State Department are more than historical coincidences. The model resembles the “civil society” tactics that the US once exported abroad: mobilizing NGOs, training activists, and coordinating media narratives to challenge national governments. These methods, often justified as pro-democracy interventions, have been repurposed domestically by the very institutions that honed them overseas. In effect, the same playbook used to destabilize foreign regimes is now being deployed against a sitting US president. When Greenberg and Levin speak of “defending democracy,” what they mean is preserving the dominance of a professional political class that defines democracy as alignment with its own worldview.
Critics who dismiss this analysis as conspiratorial ignore the transparency of the funding and personnel involved. The Open Society Foundations have themselves boasted about their support for Indivisible. In 2018, OSF publications featured quotes from Greenberg and Levin, openly acknowledging the partnership. Additional board members of Indivisible, such as Heather McGhee and Marielena Hincapié, have deep ties to Open Society-backed initiatives like the National Immigration Law Center and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund. The overlapping web of grants, fellowships, and directorships leaves little doubt that the network’s influence is deliberate, sustained, and ideological.
Understanding the purpose of No Kings requires understanding George Soros’ long project. For decades, Soros has funded efforts to “open” societies, to dissolve traditional structures of faith, family, and national sovereignty in favor of technocratic governance. In the 1980s, his collaboration with the State Department focused on Eastern Europe. By 2003, disillusioned with America’s foreign policy, Soros redirected his focus inward, declaring the United States itself the chief obstacle to his vision. His stated goal of fostering “open societies” has consistently meant weakening the cultural and institutional foundations that allow self-government to function. The No Kings campaign, cast as a defense of democracy, is instead a carefully branded attempt to delegitimize political authority that does not serve this globalist agenda.
Seen through this lens, the slogans take on a darker meaning. “No one is above the law” becomes not a statement of principle but a selective weapon aimed only at those outside the ruling ideology. The organizations behind No Kings have been conspicuously silent when progressive leaders flout constitutional limits or manipulate institutions for partisan gain. Their outrage, like their funding, is conditional. What unites them is not devotion to democracy but obedience to a transnational vision that subordinates national sovereignty to elite consensus.
It is tempting to see all of this as the natural evolution of political activism in the digital age. But the continuity between Indivisible’s origins, its funding sources, and its operational tactics suggests something more calculated. The use of donor-advised funds obscures accountability. The recycling of State Department veterans into domestic activism blurs the line between governance and agitation. The replication of color revolution strategies at home undermines the principle of peaceful democratic disagreement. Each component serves the same goal: to replace representative politics with managed consent.
The No Kings movement, then, is not about kingship but about control. Its leaders believe they alone possess the moral authority to determine the boundaries of legitimate governance. Their protests are not a call for equality under law but a demand for ideological conformity. The public spectacle of mass mobilization conceals a quiet consolidation of influence by networks that operate beyond electoral accountability.
Americans who cherish constitutional government should look past the slogans. The challenge today is not monarchy but manipulation—the steady transformation of civic engagement into a professionalized apparatus serving unelected interests. No Kings, it turns out, has many patrons. And they are not defending democracy. They are redefining it.
![]() |
Click here: to donate by Credit Card Or here: to donate by PayPal Or by mail to: Free Republic, LLC - PO Box 9771 - Fresno, CA 93794 Thank you very much and God bless you. |
Sore losers, all of them
Are you still not getting it? They’re not any kind of losers. They’re not playing the game. They are communist revolutionaries, and they’re out to overthrow and destroy the game, not to win at it.
“No Kings” protest sweeping the nation,?”
Ten times more were at the local Football game than at the protest!
and thus, a couple of misguided lefty “Jews” or people with stereotypically Jewish sounding names, create far more antisemitism than any two Fakestinian Arab terrorists could ever do
most Jewish people are NOT commies or anti-American agitators in any way. But there are a clear number who embrace such things and... sadly... the Jewish people as a whole have never really figured out how to deal with their Enemies Within, not since the Exodus 3300 years ago.
I, for one, wouldn’t know how to deal with them either. There is Jewish religious authority to, in modern language, excommunicate them. But alas, the commie leftist anti-American types are mostly not going to be upset or ‘phased’ or deterred by that. Since most of them have, in effect, abaondoned their Jewish faith when they embarced the false idols (and false narratives) of the Left.
So, what else can be done about these annoying agitators?
Just let them take over the streets and scream their little heads off? Or maybe there’s something better that could be done?
If we had a king none of the organizing nationwide demonstrators would be alive.
Typical loon left logic they’re scraping the bottom of the barrel for something cute to say.
Waaa mother..............................
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.