A network of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) with known affiliations to Marxist-aligned political ideologies initiated coordinated protest activity across Los Angeles last Friday. Almost immediately, these protests escalated into widespread unrest, including acts of vandalism, arson, and looting, consistent with patterns observed in previous color revolution-style mobilizations by the Democratic Party.
There is reason to believe that an early staging of a coordinated national mobilization effort is underway to unleash a color revolution across cities, similar to BLM-style protests that morphed into riots in 2020, spearheaded by a group identifying itself as “No Kings.” This organization appears to function as a front entity for broader far-left networks, with affiliated support from established rogue leftist NGOs, including Indivisible, a Soros-funded nonprofit previously linked to a failed color revolution targeting Elon Musk’s Tesla earlier this year.
Leftist news outlet Common Dreams stated that Indivisible’s Leah Greenberg is one of the leading groups behind the “No Kings” movement.
This weekend’s planned protest is receiving organizational backing—or, at the very least, logistical support—from nearly 200 groups, including a wide range of NGOs (get ready for the bussing of professional protesters to cities near you).
Here’s a partial list of those groups…
Notably, the timing coincides with June 14, a symbolic convergence of Flag Day, President Trump’s birthday, a military parade in Washington, DC, and the U.S. Army’s 250th anniversary, suggesting deliberate political signaling behind the mobilization effort.
Map: Nationwide Mobilization Effort
FBI Director Kash Patel told media outlet Just the News, “The FBI is investigating any and all monetary connections responsible for these riots.”
Patel might want to take a look at the funding Billionaire Walton Family Heir Christy Walton (one of the heirs to Walmart) could be involved in; the 50501 movement, the leftist group also partnered with No Kings, re-posted Walton’s protest mobilization ad in the New York Times.