Occupy Wall Street |
Written by Alex Newman |
Wednesday, 05 October 201 |
Labor unions, communists, “community organizers,” socialists, and anti-capitalist agitators have all joined together to “Occupy Wall Street” and protest against “greed,” corporations, and bankers. But despite efforts to portray the movement as “leaderless” or “grassroots,” it is becoming obvious that there is much more going on behind the scenes than meets the eye.
Billionaire financier George Soros’ fingerprints, for example, have been all over the anti-Wall Street campaign from the very beginning. And this week, the infamous hedge-fund boss publicly announced his sympathy for the protesters and their complaints about bailouts — despite the fact that he lobbied for even greater unconstitutional handouts to bankers in 2009.
“Actually I can understand their sentiment, frankly,” he told reporters while
announcing a large donation to the United Nations. “I can sympathize with their
grievances.”
But Soros’ support for the protesters goes far beyond his tepid public
statements. In fact, the original call to “Occupy Wall Street”
came from the magazine AdBusters, an “anti-consumerist” publication
financed by, among other sources, the Soros-funded Tides Foundation.
Other Soros-backed outfits promoting big government — some with myriad ties to
the Obama administration — are also publicly driving the occupation campaign.
MoveOn.org, for instance, has received millions of dollars from the billionaire
banker. And now, the group is urging its supporters to join the Occupy Wall
Street movement as well.
“Over the last two weeks, an amazing wave of protest against Wall Street and the
big banks has erupted across the country,” MoveOn said in a recent e-mail to
supporters, praising the “brave” demonstrators. “On Wednesday, MoveOn members
will join labor and community groups in New York City for a huge march down to
the protest site — the biggest yet.”
On top of supplying activists to join the demonstrations, MoveOn is also staging
what it calls a “massive ‘Virtual March on Wall Street’ online.” The
Internet-based demonstrations are a collaborative effort with another radical
and well-connected outfit tied to Soros called Rebuild the Dream.
Led by self-described communist and former Obama administration czar Van Jones,
the “Dream” movement is a
partnership
between a host of Soros-financed “progressive” groups. Big Labor and even
Planned Parenthood — the largest abortion provider in America, which
receives hundreds of millions of tax dollars each year — are partners, too.
“Together, we'll add hundreds of thousands of voices of solidarity from the
American Dream Movement for the protests across the country and show just how
widespread outrage at the Wall Street banks really is,” MoveOn boasted in its
e-mail.
Other groups working with Rebuild the Dream are also publicly hyping the
demonstrations. And more than a few of them are on the Soros payroll as well.
Some examples
include People For The American Way, Planned Parenthood, Campaign For
America's Future, Democracy For America, Leadership Conference for Civil and
Human Rights, Common Cause, Public Campaign, and many more.
Soros, of course, has a long history of financing organizations targeting the
American system of government. He has also served on the board of the immensely
influential global-governance-promoting Council on Foreign Relations.
Just last year, Soros
claimed that the brutal communist dictatorship ruling mainland China should
lead what he calls the “New World Order.” The Chinese tyrants, meanwhile, have
also been touting Occupy Wall Street through the regime’s propaganda organs.
But Soros does not love the despots in Beijing for their commitment to
“equality” or “democracy.” As The New American
reported, behind Soros and his tens of billions lies even more wealth and
power: the unimaginably vast Rothschild banking empire.
One of the richest men in the world today, Soros has been in legal trouble for
corruption before — in France, for instance, he was fined more than $2 million
for his illegal scheming. So,
critics noted, it might seem ironic that the textbook example of a “corrupt
financier” would finance a protest supposedly aimed at corrupt financiers. But
the irony hardly ends there.
Union bosses and others intimately linked to President Obama — whose
top campaign contributors included Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Citigroup,
and other big banks — are also playing a key role in the Wall Street protests.
The protesters are even recycling administration talking points such as the old
“the rich should be forced to pay their 'fair share'" — despite the fact that
the “Buffett rule” tax proposal being advanced
would almost exclusively soak what remains of the middle class.
But that might be the point. According to
reports and analysts, the whole anti-Wall Street movement has been carefully
orchestrated by the Obama-linked anti-capitalist union titans and tax-funded
“community organizers.” A troubling plot to essentially
finish off capitalism was exposed earlier this year, and at the time it was
blasted as “economic
terrorism.” Even more disturbing: It was uncannily similar to the growing
Wall Street demonstrations.
Community organizer Stephen Lerner of the SEIU, a regular White House guest, was
caught on video in March discussing the scheme to “bring down the stock
market” and "destabilize" the nation — all with the stated goal of
"redistributing wealth." And while the whole conspiracy was not revealed because
Lerner suspected police were present, the strategies he mentioned included civil
disobedience and mass anti-banker protests.
Another conspirator said to be pulling the strings, disgraced ACORN founder and
union boss Wade Rathke, was advocating massive “Day of Rage” protests targeting
bankers earlier this year. And he is also closely tied to Obama, who actually
used to work for Rathke’s “community organizing” outfit.
ACORN, of course, was
recently exposed engaging in widespread criminal activity while receiving
millions of federal tax dollars. But after the organization
filed for bankruptcy, its tentacles are taking over under new names — and
still receiving government handouts.
Rathke is also a founding board member of the Soros-funded Tides Foundation, a
key source of money for AdBusters magazine (which first called for the
Wall Street occupation) and countless other anti-business groups. And he is
directly tied to more than a few unions including the SEIU.
Beyond Big Labor and Soros “front groups,” as critics call them, is also a vast
collection of
socialist and Marxist organizations supporting the demonstrations. The
Socialist Party USA, the Marxist-oriented Workers World Party, the International
Committee of the Fourth International, and the Communist Party USA-affiliated
People’s World are all publicly and openly backing the movement.
While the occupation movement purports to be “leaderless,” in reality, critics
say its leaders and financiers are barely concealed. According to analysts, the
protests — which are
quickly spreading to cities across the United States, Canada, and Europe —
actually represent a well-orchestrated operation being used by the very same
elite “one percent” supposedly being protested against.
The “official” goals remain murky so far, almost certainly not by chance. But it
is becoming increasingly apparent that liberty and honest money are not among
the demands. Rather, bigger government, higher taxes, and an end to what remains
of the free market system seem to be at the top of the list.