In recent months, tent cities have sprouted up in schools across the country and conflicts with authorities have become all too common. What’s behind this sudden wave of engagement? New investigations have revealed that George Soros ‘ deep pockets and his network of sycophants are the source of the solution.
Branchions of the Students for Justice in Palestine ( SJP) organization, which were funded by Soros, orchestrated the protests, which started at Columbia University and quickly spread throughout the country. These demonstrations are well-organized and well-funded campaigns aimed at advancing an anti-Israel plan, no grassroots movements.
Soros’s control, according to The New York Post, extends beyond SJP. Another Soros-funded organization, the US Campaign for Palestinian Rights ( USCPR ), is instrumental in promoting and funding these protests. The USCPR employs extremists to organize campaigns on college campuses, and it offers financial incentives to spend days a week agitating for Arab reasons.
Paid radicals who are “fellows” of a Soros-funded organization called the US Campaign for Palestinian Rights ( USCPR ) are encouraging the protests at three colleges.
USCPR provides off to$ 7, 800 for its neighborhood- based colleagues and between$ 2, 880 and$ 3, 660 for its school- based “fellows” in return for spending eight hours a month organizing” efforts led by Israeli organizations”.
They are trained to “rise up, to revolutionary”.
Since 2017, the radical group has received at least$ 300,000 from Soros ‘ Open Society Foundations, and it has also received$ 355, 000 from the Rockefeller Brothers Fund.
It has three “fellows” who have been significant characters in the global protest movement.
The relationships between Soros financing and opposition authority are illustrated by former president of the University of Texas Kids for Justice in Palestine, Nidaa Lafi. Lafi, then a law student, has been spotted at several protests, including one at UT Dallas where she demanded an end to the conflict in Gaza.
But it’s not just Soros’s cash that’s fueling these rallies. The Rockefeller Brothers Fund, which includes David Rockefeller Jr. and Joseph Pierson, has even contributed considerable sums to organizations like Hebrew Voice for Peace, which participated in the protests in Columbia.
Moreover, retired Wall Street lender Felice Gelman has dedicated her wealth to pro- Arab causes, funding several of the organizations involved in the demonstrations.
The protests ‘ lavishness, which includes free distribution and natural tortilla chips for students, highlights the financial support behind them. These protests were carefully orchestrated by Soros and his allies to advance a particular agenda, not as a spontaneous expression of anger.
It’s crucial to question the veracity and motivations behind these demonstrations as these disclosures become public. Are they real emotions of concern for Israeli right, or are they a part of a larger plan that is led by wealthy people, like George Soros, in some way?