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Never did we ever imagine Fox News would run a headline that sounds ZeroHedge-style: "Second front: How a socialist cell in the US mobilized pro-Maduro foot soldiers within 12 hours."Yet here we are in 2026. Former Wall Street Journal reporter Asra Nomani, now at Fox News, is investigating the left-wing, billionaire-funded dark money networks in the nonprofit world and offering much-needed coverage for mainstream Americans on how these NGOs influence protest movements, unleash riots, and conduct sophisticated political pressure campaigns (color revolutions).Coverage on the billionaire Democratic kings and their NGO empires that are in an all-out war against President Trump, his MAGA supporters, and anything America First is becoming mainstream in a very quick way, as the censorship cartel from Europe to the Americas has seen a degradation in their ability to control fake news narratives.
WASHINGTON — Within hours of the Trump administration’s surprise extraction operation in Venezuela, commentary surrounding President Nicolás Maduro’s arrest for alleged narco-state conspiracies metastasized into something Trump’s war cabinet could not control with stealth helicopters, radar jamming, or the world’s most effective special forces units: a narrative war in support of Maduro, waged at internet speed by organizations that already had templates, coalitions, and street logistics in place — and that have demonstrated well-oiled campaigns in support of causes such as Hamas, the Iranian regime, and China’s geopolitical aims in recent years.Using the language of illegality, imperialism, sovereignty, and kidnapping, the narrative surged online and spilled into public demonstrations.It came from a familiar set of hubs: the People’s Forum in Manhattan; Code Pink, a veteran anti-war group; and a set of allied media accounts including BreakThrough News that, for years, have moved from international flashpoint to international flashpoint with a consistent ideological lens.It is a tightly aligned cluster of voices that reporting from The New York Times has connected previously to Marxist billionaire Neville Roy Singham, who lives in Shanghai and is part of Beijing’s global United Front funding and media-messaging ecosystem, according to reporting cited by U.S. Congressional leaders.