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Tag: George Soros

  • Soros foundation helping fund anti-Trump ‘No Kings’ protests nationwide

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    FIRST ON FOX: George Soros’ foundation is funding the “No Kings” protests that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and tens of thousands of protesters will be participating in on Saturday.

    Soros, a billionaire investor and notorious Democratic Party donor, is founder of the Open Society Foundation. 

    In 2023, the foundation, through the Open Society Action Fund, issued a two-year grant of $3 million to the Indivisible organization. The grant was “to support the grantee’s social welfare activities,” according to the Open Society Foundation’s website. 

    Indivisible is “managing data and communications with participants” for the “No Kings” protests that will be taking place in Washington and across the country.

    ‘NO KINGS’ PROTEST COULD ATTRACT PAID AGITATORS AND FOREIGN INFLUENCE, CROWD-FOR-HIRE CEO WARNS

    The money trail of George Soros’ Open Society Foundation leads back to the “No Kings” protests. (Jasper Juinen/Bloomberg via Getty Images / DAVID PASHAEE/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)

    Per the Open Society Foundation’s website, Soros “has given away more than $32 billion of his personal fortune” to the foundation. His son Alex serves as chairman of the board.

    According to the Indivisible organization’s website, Ezra Levin is the executive co-director behind the group. Leah Greenberg, Levin’s wife, serves as the other executive co-director. 

    Greenberg formerly served as the policy director for the Tom Perriello for Governor of Virginia campaign. Perriello was the executive director for the Open Society Foundation from October 2018 to July 2023, furthering the ties between Soros and the Indivisible organization. 

    In 2017, Indivisible received a $350,000 grant from Tides Advocacy, a group affiliated with the Tides Network. The Tides Foundation, a foundation also affiliated with the Tides Network, has been accused of funding anti-Israel campus riots.

    The grant report for 2024 was not available on the IRS nor the Open Society Foundation websites, though Soros’ foundation has awarded grants to Indivisible every year since the organization’s conception in 2017. In total, the Open Society Foundation has awarded $7.61 million in grants to the group behind the “No Kings” protest.

    A map of planned locations for No Kings protests

    A map displays the proposed and planned locations for the “No Kings” protests on Saturday. (Indivisible Website/Mapbox)

    Fox News Digital reached out to Perriello, the Indivisible group, the Open Society Foundation and the Tides Network but did not receive responses in time for publication. 

    WISCONSIN MOM ‘SEETHING’ AFTER DEMOCRATS GIVE HER 8-YEAR-OLD SON A CHILLING BRACELET CALLING FOR TRUMP’S DEATH

    Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, was the first to sound the alarm on ties between Soros and the “No Kings” protest during an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity on Thursday, saying “There’s considerable evidence that George Soros and his network are behind funding these rallies, which may well be riots all across the country.”

    Cruz introduced the Financial Underwriting of Nefarious Demonstrations and Extremist Riots (STOP FUNDERs) Act in July that would allow for the Department of Justice to impose Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) charges against individuals behind the funding of “violent” and “extreme” protests. 

    Sen. Ted Cruz

    Sen. Ted Cruz said the “No Kings” protests are “organized by Soros operatives and funded by Soros money.” (Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images)

    “This politicized march is being organized by Soros operatives and funded by Soros money. No one denies these basic facts,” Cruz told Fox News Digital. “The Trump administration and the Republican Congress are committed to countering this network of left-wing violence.”

    Per the Indivisible website, “On October 18, millions of us are rising again” to protest in an effort to paint President Donald Trump as a tyrant and an authoritarian king. 

    REPUBLICANS FUME AS DEMOCRATS BLOCK 9TH GOP BID TO REOPEN GOVERNMENT

    Schumer announced on Thursday that he would be attending the protest, saying he “will join the marchers, to celebrate what makes this country so great” and encouraged peaceful demonstrations. 

    Indivisible, the group behind the "No Kings" protests and their partners.

    The Communist Workers of America Party is also a sponsor of the “No Kings” protest.  (Indivisible)

    In addition to funding from Soros, the Communist Workers of America Union is also partnered with the “No Kings” protest. 

    “Protests can be strenuous and intense,” the “How to Prepare for a Protest” section of the Indivisible website reads.

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    “They are most effective when we peacefully use our constitutionally protected rights of assembly and speech and properly prepare ahead of time,” the website continued.

    Preston Mizell is a writer with Fox News Digital covering breaking news. Story tips can be sent to Preston.Mizell@fox.com and on X @MizellPreston

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  • Report: Soros Foundation Gave $80M To Groups Tied To ‘Extremist Violence’

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    Amid President Donald Trump officially designating Antifa a domestic terror organization, a new report details how a prominent billionaire may be funneling millions to extremist groups engaging in violent uprisings nationwide.

    A new report from Capital Research Center details how billionaire George Soros’s Open Society Foundations has given more than $80 million to groups “tied to terrorism or extremist violence.”

    The foundation has awarded more than $23 million to seven groups “that directly assist domestic terrorism and criminality” in the U.S., including engaging or providing material support to “violence, property destruction, economic sabotage, harassment” among others that meet the domestic terrorism definition, according to the report.

    The report, authored by Ryan Mauro, details a nexus between domestic terror activities and support for international terrorism, specifically Hamas, in addition to communist sympathizers.

    “Open Society has sent millions of dollars into U.S.-based organizations that engage in ‘direct actions’ that the FBI defines as domestic terrorism,” according to the report. “These groups include the Center for Third World Organizing and its militant partner Ruckus Society, which trained activists in property destruction and sabotage during the 2020 riots, the Sunrise Movement, which endorsed the Antifa-linked Stop Cop City campaign, in which activists currently face over 40 domestic terrorism charges and 60 racketeering indictments.”

    The report highlights the Sunrise Movement, which it says has received at least $2 million from Open Society, adding that it has “endorsed and solicited financial support” for Antifa-associated groups such as Stop Cop City/Defend the Atlanta Forest coalition. The coalition has been tied to arson and violence against law enforcement and utility workers, including an attack on the construction of a police training center by throwing Molotov cocktails, bricks and rocks, as well as setting construction equipment on fire.

    As part of its outreach, the Sunrise movement has urged supporters to donate to the Atlanta Solidarity Fund, which supports protestors in various capacities, including legal defense and physical supplies, according to the report.

    “The Fund admits it posts bail and provides legal defenses for the arrested protestors. Prosecutors allege it also provides funds for ammunition, surveillance equipment, handheld radios, a drone, and an array of camping supplies for Stop Cop City terrorist activities,” according to the report.

    Among the other groups Open Society supports, according to the report, is $400,000 since 2020 to the Center for Third World Organizing/Ruckus Society/BlackOUT Collective. The report claims the group “boasts it ‘threw down with people in the streets’” during the George Floyd riots in the summer of 2020.

    “The Center says it ‘trained thousands, supported over 100 organizations’ in 2020-2021 and took part in ‘uprisings’ by teaching ‘new tactics for actions during lockdown.’ The Center offers training for ‘direct actions,’ a term that is used to refer to confrontational and usually violent and destructive protests,” according to the report. “The Center has unified three extremist groups into its ‘hub,’ including at least two that promote criminality: The anarchism-associated Ruckus Society, a militant ‘direct action’ group that boasts of its assistance to rioters, like those in Minnesota in 2020.”

    The report indicates that one of the founders of Ruckus Society also founded an anarcho-environmentalist terror group, citing InfluenceWatch, which says the society’s “own training materials state that the group provides instruction in ‘tactics to resist the unjust system. Some of these may be legal strategies while others may be outside of the law, such as the use of civil disobedience.’”

    The report goes on to claim that The BlackOUT Collective has “produced a pro-Hamas guide that glorifies the October 7 terror attacks in Israel.

    “The guide also provides Ruckus Society materials that advocate for and provide instructions for executing illegal ‘direct actions,’ including property destruction, evading law enforcement, using false IDs, occupying buildings and land, seizing assets, revealing the identities of government agents, blockades, interfering with governmental or industrial operations, and economic shutdowns. All of these actions qualify as acts of domestic terrorism,” according to the report.

    The report argues that Open Society’s tax exemptions could be at risk because it funds “groups that brazenly acknowledge their prohibited behavior,” which could lead to investigation.

    During an announcement in the Oval Office on Aug. 15, The Center Square asked the president if he was considering designating Antifa a domestic terror organization. The president fully supported the idea, leading to the designation one week later.

    Trump told The Center Square that he would consider designating other groups, but wouldn’t indicate others by name. He said he’s talked with Attorney General Pam Bondi about bringing federal RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act) charges against some of these organizations and their donors.

    “There are other groups, yeah, there are other groups. We have some pretty radical groups, and they got away with murder. And also, I’ve been speaking to the Attorney General about bringing RICO against some of the people that you’ve been reading about that have been putting up millions and millions of dollars for agitation,” Trump said. “These aren’t protests. These are crimes. What they’re doing, where they’re throwing bricks at cars of the of ICE and border patrol.”

    The report comes amid a rise in left-wing violence, including multiple attacks on ICE officials as well as facilities, specifically Wednesday’s shooting at a Dallas ICE facility, leading to the death of one detainee and injuring two others.

    Syndicated with permission from The Center Square.

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    Sarah Roderick-Fitch – The Center Square

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  • Trump crackdown on ‘radical left’ after Charlie Kirk’s death targets Soros, Indivisible despite evid | Fortune

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    President Donald Trump is escalating threats to crack down on what he describes as the “radical left” following Charlie Kirk’s assassination, stirring fears that his administration is trying to harness outrage over the killing to suppress political opposition.

    Without establishing any link to last week’s shooting, the Republican president and members of his administration have discussed classifying some groups as domestic terrorists, ordering racketeering investigations and revoking tax-exempt status for progressive nonprofits. The White House pointed to Indivisible, a progressive activist network, and the Open Society Foundations, founded by George Soros, as potential subjects of scrutiny.

    Although administration officials insist that their focus is preventing violence, critics see an extension of Trump’s campaign of retribution against his political enemies and an erosion of free speech rights. Any moves to weaken liberal groups could also shift the political landscape ahead of next year’s midterm elections, which will determine control of Congress and statehouses across the country.

    “The radical left has done tremendous damage to the country,” Trump told reporters on Tuesday morning when leaving for a state visit to the United Kingdom. “But we’re fixing it.”

    Trump has sometimes made similar threats without following through. But now there’s renewed interest fueled by anger over the killing of Kirk, a conservative activist who was a prominent supporter of Trump and friends with many of his advisers.

    More than 100 nonprofit leaders, representing organizations including the Ford Foundation, the Omidyar Network and the MacArthur Foundation, released a joint letter saying “we reject attempts to exploit political violence to mischaracterize our good work or restrict our fundamental freedoms.”

    “Attempts to silence speech, criminalize opposing viewpoints, and misrepresent and limit charitable giving undermine our democracy and harm all Americans,” they wrote.

    White House blames ‘terrorist networks’

    Authorities said they believe the suspect in Kirk’s assassination acted alone, and they charged him with murder on Tuesday.

    However, administration officials have repeatedly made sweeping statements about the need for broader investigations and punishments related to Kirk’s death.

    Attorney General Pam Bondi blamed “left-wing radicals” for the shooting and said “they will be held accountable.” Stephen Miller, a top policy adviser, said there was an “organized campaign that led to this assassination.”

    Miller’s comments came during a conversation with Vice President JD Vance, who was guest-hosting Kirk’s talk show from his ceremonial office in the White House on Monday.

    Miller said he was feeling “focused, righteous anger,” and “we are going to channel all of the anger” as they work to “uproot and dismantle these terrorist networks” by using “every resource we have.”

    Vance blamed “crazies on the far left” for saying the White House would “go after constitutionally protected speech.” Instead, he said, “We’re going to go after the NGO network that foments, facilitates and engages in violence.”

    Asked for examples, the White House pointed to demonstrations where police officers and federal agents have been injured, as well as the distribution of goggles and face masks during protests over immigration enforcement in Los Angeles.

    There was also a report that Indivisible offered to reimburse people who gathered at Tesla dealerships to oppose Elon Musk’s leadership of the Department of Government Efficiency. Sometimes cars were later vandalized.

    Indivisible’s leadership has said “political violence is a cancer on democracy” and said that their own organization has “been threatened by right-wingers all year.”

    Nonprofits brace for impact

    Trump’s executive actions have rattled nonprofit groups with attempts to limit their work or freeze federal funding, but more aggressive proposals to revoke tax-exempt status never materialized.

    Now the mood has darkened as nonprofits recruit lawyers and bolster the security of their offices and staff.

    “It’s a heightened atmosphere in the wake of political violence, and organizations who fear they might be unjustly targeted in its wake are making sure that they are ready,” said Lisa Gilbert, co-president of the government watchdog group Public Citizen.

    Trump made retribution against political enemies a cornerstone of his comeback campaign, and he’s mobilized the federal government to reshape law firms, universities and other traditionally independent institutions. He also ordered an investigation into ActBlue, an online liberal fundraising platform.

    Some nonprofits expect the administration to focus on prominent funders like Soros, a liberal billionaire who has been a conservative target for years, to send a chill through the donor community.

    Trump recently said Soros should face a racketeering investigation, though he didn’t make any specific allegations. The Open Society Foundations condemned violence and Kirk’s assassination in a statement and said “it is disgraceful to use this tragedy for political ends to dangerously divide Americans and attack the First Amendment.”

    Sen. Chris Murphy, a Democrat from Connecticut, wrote on social media that “the murder of Charlie Kirk could have united Americans to confront political violence” but “Trump and his anti-democratic radicals look to be readying a campaign to destroy dissent.”

    White House spokeswoman Abigail Jackson said “it is disingenuous and false for Democrats to say administration actions are about political speech.” She said the goal is to “target those committing criminal acts and hold them accountable.”

    Republicans back Trump’s calls for investigations

    Trump’s concerns about political violence are noticeably partisan. He described people who rioted at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, as “hostages” and “patriots,” and he pardoned 1,500 of them on his first day back in the Oval Office. He also mocked House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi after an attack on her husband.

    When Trump condemned Kirk’s killing in a video message last week, he mentioned several examples of “radical left political violence” but ignored attacks on Democrats.

    Asked on Monday about the killing of Minnesota state Rep. Melissa Hortman over the summer, Trump said “I’m not familiar” with the case.

    “Trump shrugs at right-wing political violence,” said Ezra Levin, the co-executive director of Indivisible, in a newsletter.

    Some conservative commentators have cheered on a potential crackdown. Laura Loomer, a conspiracy theorist with a long record of bigoted comments, said “let’s shut the left down.” She also said that she wants Trump “to be the ‘dictator’ the left thinks he is.”

    Katie Miller, the wife of Stephen Miller and a former administration spokeswoman, asked Bondi whether there would be “more law enforcement going after these groups” and “putting cuffs on people.”

    “We will absolutely target you, go after you, if you are targeting anyone with hate speech,” Bondi said. “And that’s across the aisle.”

    Her comments sparked a backlash from across the political spectrum, since even hate speech is generally considered to be protected under the First Amendment. Bondi was more circumspect on social media on Tuesday morning, saying they would focus on “hate speech that crosses the line into threats of violence.”

    Trump is getting more support from Republicans in Congress. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and others proposed legislation that would enable the Justice Department to use racketeering laws, originally envisioned to combat organized crime, to prosecute violent protesters and the groups that support them.

    Rep. Chip Roy of Texas wants the House to create a special committee to investigate the nonprofit groups, saying “we must follow the money to identify the perpetrators of the coordinated anti-American assaults being carried out against us.”

    ___
    Associated Press writer Bill Barrow in Atlanta contributed to this report.

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    Chris Megerian, Lisa Mascaro, Alanna Durkin Richer, The Associated Press

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  • Hillary Advisor and Ex-Wife of Anthony Weiner Huma Abedin Engaged to George Soros’ Son Alex

    Hillary Advisor and Ex-Wife of Anthony Weiner Huma Abedin Engaged to George Soros’ Son Alex

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    Screenshot: Page Six Youtube

    It’s a big club, and you ain’t in it, kid.

    The newest megapowered political couple has been born. Huma Abedin, famous for being a consigliere to Hillary Clinton and infamous for formerly being married to disgraced Democrat Anthony Weiner, is engaged.

    To none other than the son of leftwing billionaire and activist George Soros.

    Human Abedin Engaged to Alex Soros

    People tend to forget now, but there was a time when Anthony Weiner of all people was a rising star in the Democrat Party.

    That, if you ask this writer, was in part no small thanks to his wife, Hillary Clinton muse Huma Abedin.

    Most people remember what happened next: Weiner was caught up in a sexual scandal involving other women. Weiner went as far as to send explicit photos from his personal Twitter account, which was found and publicized by the team at Breitbart.

    Nancy Pelosi even demanded a House Ethics Committee investigation into Weiner’s activities.

    Shortly after, Weiner resigned from Congress. All the while, the media covered Huma Abedin’s movements and body language to suss out the state of the relationship. Abedin would stay with Weiner for six more years before getting divorced in 2017.

    Who Is Alex Soros?

    While most people are aware of or at least recognize Abedin’s name, Alex Soros, the son of the far-left billionaire George Soros, is less popularly known.

    But that doesn’t mean he isn’t well known in the halls of power. He is. He’s currently the chair of the Board of Directors for Soros’ “Open Society Foundations,” a slush fund for left-wing political activities.

    His social media accounts are chock-full of photos with the most powerful people in the world. Here’s but a small sampling:

    He’s also a “frequent” guest at the Biden White House.

    Abedin and Soros apparently tied the knot weeks ago, but just got around to publicizing the event. Here’s Soros’ Instagram post about the engagement:

    One thing is for certain. There isn’t likely to be a more powerful couple to come along for some time after these two relative youngsters.

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    Derek Ellerman

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  • Legendary investor Jim Rogers sees an epic market bubble and looming economic disaster. He hopes to short the 'Magnificent 7' stocks when the time is right.

    Legendary investor Jim Rogers sees an epic market bubble and looming economic disaster. He hopes to short the 'Magnificent 7' stocks when the time is right.

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    Jim Rogers.REUTERS/Bobby Yip

    • Jim Rogers expects a multi-asset bubble to burst and the American economy to run into trouble.

    • George Soros’ cofounder hopes to profit by shorting the “Magnificent Seven” stocks at the right time.

    • Rogers touted gold and silver, warned the inflation threat isn’t over, and slammed the Fed.

    Jim Rogers expects asset prices to plunge and economic disaster to strike — and he plans to profit by betting against stock-market darlings like Tesla and Nvidia when the time is right.

    “Bonds are a bubble, property in many countries is a bubble, stocks are getting ready for a bubble,” the veteran investor and travel author told Soar Financially in a recent interview.

    Rogers has dumped many of his stocks and bonds in anticipation of a painful slump, but he’s “not shorting yet because often at the end there’s a blowoff and things get really crazy,” he said.

    He flagged “warning signs” of an approaching collapse, including a handful of stocks dragging the major indices higher this year, and newbie investors boasting to all of their friends about how easy it is to make money trading stocks.

    The markets guru, best known for cofounding the Quantum Fund and Soros Fund Management with George Soros, said he’s itching to bet against the “Magnificent Seven” stocks — Apple, Alphabet, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, Tesla, and Nvidia.

    “When the market comes to an end, the last high flyers are the best shorts,” he said. “The stocks that have done extremely well and are very expensive — that, I hope, is where I’m smart enough to short next time around.”

    Rogers, 81, also predicted the US economy would run into trouble soon as a result of its ballooning debt pile.

    “I would suspect that next year things are not going to look as happy,” he said. Rogers noted he wasn’t sure if a recession or mild downturn lies ahead, but he’s “worried” that there hasn’t been a prolonged economic slump since the 2008 financial crisis, and global debt loads have ballooned since then.

    “The next problem has to be the worst in my lifetime because the debt is just unbelievable,”  he said.

    Rogers advised people to own precious metals, which tend to retain their value better than other assets during periods of panic.

    “Everybody should have some silver and gold under the bed,” he said. “Look, all of us peasants know, when there’s a serious catastrophe, you better have some gold and silver in the closet, so I do.”

    The “Adventure Capitalist” author also predicted inflation, which has cooled significantly in the past year, would reaccelerate to painful levels. Moreover, he accused the Federal Reserve of having no idea what it’s doing, and dismissed all but a couple of the central bank’s leaders over the last century as clueless “bureaucrats and academics.”

    Rogers has a wealth of experience and a deep understanding of financial history, but it’s worth pointing out that he’s been predicting the worst downturn of his lifetime for several years now, yet both markets and the economy have defied his grave warnings.

    Read the original article on Business Insider

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  • Nvidia wins fresh support as firms tied to Bill Gates and Ray Dalio reveal stakes in the microchip giant

    Nvidia wins fresh support as firms tied to Bill Gates and Ray Dalio reveal stakes in the microchip giant

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    Bill Gates.Ramin Talaie / Getty

    • Firms tied to Bill Gates and Ray Dalio purchased small stakes in Nvidia last quarter, filings show.

    • The Gates Foundation Trust and Bridgewater Associates both bought shares of the microchip maker.

    • Funds linked to George Soros, Jim Simons, and Stanley Druckenmiller pared or exited their positions.

    Nvidia attracted two high-profile backers last quarter, as funds linked to Bill Gates and Ray Dalio took small stakes in the microchip maker.

    The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Trust, which invests the Gates Foundation’s endowment, bought Nvidia shares for the first time on record, a SEC filing revealed this week. It purchased about 9,200 shares, worth $4 million at the end of September.

    The Gates’ trust diversified its stock portfolio in the period, expanding it from 23 holdings to 74, but its total value was almost flat at $39 billion. Its largest positions were a $12 billion stake in Microsoft, and nearly $8 billion worth of Berkshire Hathaway stock as a result of Warren Buffett’s yearly gifts to the foundation.

    While the bet on Nvidia was relatively small, the wager still ranked in the top half of the trust’s portfolio by value. Cascade, the asset manager which oversees the Trust and Gates’ personal fortune, also disclosed new stakes in Apple, Meta, Amazon, and Alphabet. It may have invested in Nvidia as part of a broader effort to boost its Big Tech exposure.

    Dalio-founded Bridgewater Associates established a stake in Nvidia last quarter too, filings show. The hedge-fund behemoth, run by three co-CIOs since Dalio stepped down last year, purchased just over 48,000 shares worth $21 million at September’s close.

    The last time that Bridgewater reported a Nvidia stake was in the third quarter of last year. It’s worth noting the new wager is small relative to the firm’s biggest positions on September 30, which included a $700 million stake in Procter & Gamble and roughly $500 million positions in each of Costco and Coca-Cola.

    Nvidia’s stock price has soared by about 240% this year, as investors wager the artificial-intelligence boom will supercharge demand for its graphics chips. The company has certainly received a boost; its revenue roughly doubled year-on-year to about $14 billion in the three months to July, lifting its net income by nearly 10-fold to over $6 billion.

    Funds tied to other high-profile investors took a different tack to Gates and Dalio’s firms. Soros Fund Management dumped its entire $4 million stake in Nvidia, Jim Simons’ Renaissance Technologies slashed its bet by 34% to 1.2 million shares, and Stanley Druckenmiller’s Duquesne Family Office trimmed its position by about 8% to 875,000 shares, filings showed this week.

    Read the original article on Business Insider

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  • A Palestinian artist who teaches college in Massachusetts is one of the 18 people chosen by George Soros’ foundation for its class of 2023

    A Palestinian artist who teaches college in Massachusetts is one of the 18 people chosen by George Soros’ foundation for its class of 2023

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    Palestinian artist Nida Sinnokrot, one of 18 artists receiving the 2023 Soros Arts Fellowships from the Open Society Foundations on Tuesday, says that art provides hope and resilience, even in the midst of war.

    “It’s our duty to find the strength to keep the despair at bay in the face of the unimaginable,” said Sinnokrot, who is the co-founder of Sakiya, a Palestinian academy of agrarian traditions and contemporary art, and a faculty member in Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Art, Culture, and Technology Program. “We have to, as artists, find the courage to disrupt convention, practice the spreading of hope and cultivate new stories and imaginaries that challenge divisive binaries.”

    Members of this year’s class of Soros Arts Fellows, including Sinnokrot, will receive $100,000 in unrestricted funding from Open Society Foundations to develop a public art project that confronts climate change with community-based solutions in the next 18 months, said Tatiana Mouarbes, Open Society’s Team Manager for Culture, Art, and Expression.

    “There’s a clear need for bold action, for justice and for equity-based solutions to ensure a more regenerative and life-sustaining world,” said Mouarbes, adding that “systems of global colonialism, white supremacy and capitalism have long stripped the environment of its natural resources.”

    At a time when many in philanthropy are reevaluating priorities — including Open Society Foundations, as the nonprofit founded by billionaire philanthropist George Soros changes under the new leadership of his son, Alex — Mouarbes said artists’ work can be just as impactful as other more traditional investments. This year’s class of Soros Arts Fellows is the largest since the program launched in 2018.

    “We firmly believe that art is not only an essential driver for social change, but that robust, diverse and fortified arts and culture landscapes are prerequisites for open, just and inclusive societies everywhere,’ she said. ”Art is transformative in so many ways, in expanding political and collective consciousness, in transforming and challenging and providing alternatives to oppressive power structures and ideologies, and for creating momentum for change.”

    New York-based artist Jordan Weber, another of the 2023 Soros Arts Fellows, said he was thrilled to be part of the group because the foundation works hard to support art that creates direct action, rather than simply “talking about the problems in our communities.”

    “Individuals who are implementing arts that are really effective, they’re treating the cause of the problem,” said Weber, who will plant an acre of conifer trees in Detroit as part of a remediation project to counter pollution from nearby factories producing automobiles, while also engaging the community to enjoy the open space and learn about environmental justice. “I feel like we’re on the cutting edge of that. … This is the launchpad of something new — a new realm of direct action in the arts.”

    Molemo Moiloa also plans to incorporate community action in her art project in Johannesburg, South Africa, for her Soros Arts fellowship. Moiloa said her project is a reaction to the weariness many younger South Africans currently feel, as the hopes generated by Nelson Mandela’s inauguration as the country’s first Black president in 1994 have dimmed.

    “Particularly since the pandemic, we’ve been hit really, really hard — a lot of the people who were kind of just keeping it together aren’t anymore,” Moiloa said. “The idea of preparing for collapse sounds a bit dramatic, but it’s also about using it as an opportunity, as a moment to think about a kind of economic and political system that wasn’t really built for everybody.”

    Her project “The Ungovernable” will help people connect with the land and teach them strategies to survive uncertain times, combining an area for urban farming and community centers that allow “reconnecting with traditional and indigenous knowledge systems.”

    Sinnokrot’s project “Storytelling Stones: How far does your mother’s voice carry?” also involves finding inspiration from “ancestral knowledges systems” to develop more nuanced and sustainable approaches to complex issues, including climate change. He wants to build Palestinian stone shelters known as mintar and give them new uses, including as “an acoustic chamber, that can resonate with the environment and our oral histories.”

    Despite the ongoing Israel-Hamas war, Sinnokrot said he still plans to build his project in Palestine, though he declines to say where.

    “One of the reasons I still feel hope is that there is powerful solidarity around the world that embraces this ethos,” he said. “And that’s what’s so amazing about this year’s (Soros Arts Fellows) and their communities. Soros and its Open Society initiative is supporting a global commons, and that is precisely what it takes to change the world.”

    ___

    The 2023 Soros Art Fellows are:

    Bilia Bah, of Guinea; Cannupa Hanska Luger, of the Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, and Lakota tribes in the United States; Carolina Caycedo, of Colombia and the United States; Chemi Rosado-Seijo, of Puerto Rico; Dalton Paula, of Brazil; Deborah Jack, of St. Maarten; Fehras Publishing Practices, the collective of Kenan Darwich and Sami Rustom, both from Syria and based in Germany; Ixchel Tonāntzin Xōchitlzihuatl, of the United States; Jordan Weber, of the United States; Martha Atienza, of the Philippines; Molemo Moiloa, of South Africa; Mónica de Miranda, of Portugal; Nida Sinnokrot, of Palestine; Omar Berrada, of Morocco; Rijin Sahakian, of Iraq and the United States; Sari Dennise, of Mexico; Yto Barrada, of Morocco.

    ___

    Associated Press coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content. For all of AP’s philanthropy coverage, visit https://apnews.com/hub/philanthropy.

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    Glenn Gamboa, The Associated Press

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  • Americans Reveal What It’s Like Living With The Woke Mind Virus

    Americans Reveal What It’s Like Living With The Woke Mind Virus

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    With the ailment blamed for many of the problems in the country, The Onion asked Americans what it is like to live with the Woke Mind Virus, and this is what they said.

    Corey Wainwright, Gaffer

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal What It’s Like Living With The Woke Mind Virus

    “I caught it from my son after he went to a school that hadn’t burned all their books.”

    Matt Cohn, Social Media Specialist

    Matt Cohn, Social Media Specialist

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    “I wake up naked every night inside a Planned Parenthood, unable to remember how I got there or what I was doing.”

    Grace Klein, Pastry Chef

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    “Now anytime I wear blackface, my skin burns.”

    Grant Wheelan, Engineer

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    “My wife got it, but she was totally fine after I chained her up and locked her in the basement for two weeks without food or water.”

    Sarah Batts, Copywriter

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    “I just wish there were a vaccine for the woke mind virus that I could have refused to take.”

    Sarah Collins, Veterinarian

    Sarah Collins, Veterinarian

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    “We’re just hoping that someday, someone holds George Soros responsible for doing this to us.”

    Mason Hudson, Interior Decorator

    Mason Hudson, Interior Decorator

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    “The woke mind virus caused a tiny Ibram X. Kendi to burst out of my colleague’s chest after devouring his insides for sustenance. It then jumped into my mouth and I was so frightened I accidentally swallowed it. I’m afraid the same fate will now befall me.”

    Isla Menendez, Warehouse Worker

    Isla Menendez, Warehouse Worker

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    “I got it from a Chick-fil-A sandwich, go figure!”

    Josh Doyle, Director

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    “Oh, you know. I start the day with a woke shower and then eat some woke eggs and woke potatoes. Then I put on my woke pants and woke shirt and hail a woke taxi to job shooting woke pornography.”

    Dylan Holland, Registered Nurse

    Dylan Holland, Registered Nurse

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    “I want to yell racial slurs, but every time I open my mouth, ‘Fight Song’ comes out instead.”

    Ralph Busco, Podiatrist

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    “Well, for one, I’m gay now. Granted. I was before, too. The woke mind virus apparently doesn’t really have an effect on your sexuality, funny enough.”

    Bryce Gibbs, Sales Manager

    Bryce Gibbs, Sales Manager

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    “There is a tattoo of Kamala Harris where my penis used to be.”

    Marcie Hawkins, Statistician

    Marcie Hawkins, Statistician

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    “Frankly, I don’t know how long I have left. My insurance doesn’t cover woke mind virus.”

    Liam Cote, Arcade Owner

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    “I spent $150,000 replacing my eyeballs, tongue, face, and nose so I look like a giant hardcover copy of White Fragility.”

    Travis Pendant, Electrician

    Travis Pendant, Electrician

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    “I think I only got a mild case, because I still call anyone who doesn’t go on a date with me a whore.”

    Kelsey Jamison, Seamstress

    Kelsey Jamison, Seamstress

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    “I beg for death, but I cannot die. I’ve jumped off a 10-story building. I’ve tied cinderblocks to my feet and jumped in a lake. I’ve shot myself in the head. Every time, I come to on a liberal college campus in a women’s studies class.”

    Vincent Rodriguez, Catholic Priest

    Vincent Rodriguez, Catholic Priest

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    “The impulse to molest is luckily stored in a different, unaffected part of the cortex.”

    Janet Knight, Makeup Artist

    Janet Knight, Makeup Artist

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    “I hallucinated that I was in a committed, long-term relationship with Rosie O’Donnell, and I liked it.”

    Ben Thompson, Grocery Store Cashier

    Ben Thompson, Grocery Store Cashier

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    “I develop a new symptom every day, it’s honestly a frustratingly incoherent illness.”

    Liza Andres, Administrative Assistant

    Liza Andres, Administrative Assistant

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    “It spreads through a cursed, tattered copy of We Should All Be Feminists that keeps showing up on your doorstep, no matter how many times you throw it away.”

    Marissa Schlagel, Waitress

    Marissa Schlagel, Waitress

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    “I think Black people should be able to vote. Goodbye. I can’t keep living like this. These will be my final words.”

    Paul Klein, Pilot

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    “An immigrant carried it over! An immigrant from elsewhere! Elsewhere has the woke mind virus, and the immigrant, who is of course unclean, brought the woke mind virus from the elsewhere and it now has infected my whole family!”

    Armie Hammer, Actor

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    “Hello. Can I be woke?”

    Theresa Lamb, Software Developer

    Theresa Lamb, Software Developer

    Image for article titled Americans Reveal What It’s Like Living With The Woke Mind Virus

    “I am unable to see the American flag.”

    Dan Menchin, Videographer

    Dan Menchin, Videographer

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    “Is the woke virus the thing where you turn into a goat whenever there’s a red tide? And you have to roam around eating grass and tree bark with the other goats until the red tide pulls away? If so, I have that, yeah.”

    Jane Ginsburg, Attorney

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    “The woke mind virus killed my mother, Ruth Bader Ginsburg.”

    Howard Campbell, Tech Executive

    Howard Campbell, Tech Executive

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    “You’re not going to like this, but the only antidote is Joe Biden’s semen.”

    You’ve Made It This Far…

    You’ve Made It This Far…

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  • Is Ben Wikler the Most Important Democrat in America?

    Is Ben Wikler the Most Important Democrat in America?

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    The man who has been hailed as “the best state chair in the country” is not a national household name. He’s not even a household name in his own state. But on a recent afternoon in the small village of Grafton, Wisconsin, Ben Wikler might as well have been Bono.

    Two dozen middle-aged and retired volunteers stood in line to clutch the hand of the chair of the Wisconsin Democrats. “Thank you for everything you do,” they said, beaming at Wikler as he took a lap through the Ozaukee County party headquarters. “We’re so happy you’re here.” Like proud children before an admiring parent, the volunteers told him how much money they’d raised and how many doors they’d knocked on this summer.

    “This is Connie,” someone said, patting a woman’s shoulder. “She just won the school-board race.” “Yay, school board!” Wikler cheered.

    He was there to kick off the last day of door knocking for a Wisconsin state-assembly candidate who had very little chance of winning in solid-red Ozaukee County, an exurban district on the shore of Lake Michigan north of Milwaukee. But the point was not to win, it was to lose by less. That afternoon, Wikler managed to deliver a speech with almost the same inspirational zeal as Aragorn at the Black Gate. “This election is a demonstration to ourselves as Democrats and to the country that there is change happening right now,” he told the volunteers—and a reminder to Republicans “that Democrats have not given up on democracy.”

    Since becoming chair in 2019, Wikler has brought his party back from virtual irrelevance in Wisconsin. Four years after Donald Trump had demolished the so-called blue wall in the upper Midwest, Wikler’s leadership helped tip Wisconsin—and the entire presidential election—to the Democrats in 2020. Then, earlier this year, the millions of dollars Wikler had raised helped a progressive candidate prevail in the off-cycle state-supreme-court race, which will likely lead to a reworking of Wisconsin’s extremely gerrymandered maps.

    Wikler’s talent is getting people to show up. He does this by framing every race as the election of a lifetime. “Resources tend to flow toward the places where they can make a difference or their imagination has been captured,” he told me.

    Resources is something of a euphemism; he really means dollars. Thanks to legislation passed by Republicans a few years ago, Wisconsin is one of the few states in which individuals can donate unlimited amounts to political parties, which can, in turn, transfer unlimited funds to candidates. It is Wikler’s particular genius to have turned that weapon of fundraising against the party that made it law.

    In the run-up to next year’s presidential election, American eyeballs will once again be on Wikler’s home. “If we could have a Ben Wikler in all 50 states, the Democratic Party would be in better shape,” Jon Favreau, the podcaster and former Obama speechwriter, told me. But people may be getting tired of elections with existential stakes, however much the party spends persuading them to go out and vote. Capturing imaginations once again, especially on behalf of an elderly incumbent with less-than-great approval ratings, could be Wikler’s most formidable challenge yet.

    I hitched a ride to the Ozaukee County event with Wikler’s posse in their rented minivan. When I slid open the back door, I found the state party chair buckled into a seat in the middle row, his head grazing the ceiling. The 42-year-old Wikler, who is goateed and tall (6 foot 4), was wearing clear-framed glasses and a denim shirt over denim jeans. He looked like a Brooklyn dad—but Wikler is a dad from Madison, a fact he is very proud of.

    I’d hardly sat down before Wikler launched into a 30-minute refresher course, for my benefit, on Wisconsin’s idiosyncratic past. Robert La Follette and the state’s socialist roots. Senator Joe McCarthy. Governor Tommy Thompson’s welfare reform. Then more recent history: Scott Walker’s ascension to the governor’s mansion in 2011, and Republicans’ success in flipping both chambers of the state legislature. Walker’s Act 10 legislation, which eroded the power of public unions. The GOP’s controversial and secretive redistricting project.

    “How many times have you delivered that spiel?” I asked when he was done.

    He smiled. “There’s actually an extended version.”

    Today, Wikler lives in his childhood home on Madison’s west side with his wife, his three kids, and their enormous, excitable Bernese mountain dog. But before moving back to the upper Midwest, Wikler was the Washington, D.C., director of the progressive organization MoveOn, for which he led protests against Republican attempts to overturn the Affordable Care Act. Prior to that, Wikler hosted a politics podcast called The Good Fight after a spell as a researcher and producer for Al Franken. The former senator from Minnesota remains a close friend. “He’s just brilliant—really funny and a really good writer,” Franken told me of Wikler last month, over the phone. “He has the full package, and that’s hard to get in a state chairman.” (The title of Franken’s 2003 book, Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them, was Wikler’s idea, Franken said.)

    Then, in 2016, Trump hurtled through the blue wall, winning Wisconsin’s Electoral College votes for the Republicans for the first time since Ronald Reagan in 1984. Which is why Wikler ultimately decided to move back home and help revive his party’s fortunes.

    As chair, Wikler is known for posting climactic Twitter threads about Wisconsin elections that go viral. He’s constantly giving interviews to convey the urgency of races up- and down-ballot. The central strategy of his chairmanship, Wikler told me, “has been to buy a bigger siren, and put it as high up as we possibly can.”

    Most state parties in America have somewhere around half a dozen full-time paid staff members, but Wikler has expanded his staff from 30 to 70. He has a comprehensive digital operation, an in-house research group, and a full-time staff of youth organizers.

    Since 2019, Wikler has used his connections in national politics to raise more than $110 million, an astoundingly high amount for a state party. His team’s most successful money-gathering endeavor was getting celebrities such as Robin Wright and Julia Louis-Dreyfus to care about the Badger State: In September 2020, the Wisconsin Democrats hosted a Zoom table reading of the 1987 film The Princess Bride that reunited most of the original cast. The event attracted more than 100,000 viewers and raised $4.25 million. So they did it twice more, with the casts of The West Wing and Veep.

    Wisconsin could have gone the way of neighboring Iowa, which has turned sharply to the right in these past six years. In the Badger State, the trend toward Democrats began in 2018, when many voters revolted against Trump. But thanks in large part to the machine that Wikler has built, the party has continued to win by bigger and bigger margins in the state’s metropolitan areas in the past few cycles, and it’s losing by smaller margins in the Republican-leaning suburbs of Milwaukee. Although Democrats nationally have been hemorrhaging voters in rural areas, they’ve managed to at least stop the bleeding in rural Wisconsin, Craig Gilbert, the retired Washington bureau chief for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, told me.

    Statewide elections have proved to be the most rewarding battlegrounds for Democrats. In Wisconsin, Biden beat Trump in 2020 by 20,000 votes, and last year Democratic Governor Tony Evers narrowly won reelection. The only major disappointment was Mandela Barnes’s loss to the incumbent Republican senator, Ron Johnson. But just this past spring, Wisconsinites elected Janet Protasiewicz to the state supreme court in a race that broke turnout records and attracted donations from George Soros, Steven Spielberg, and Illinois Governor J. B. Pritzker.

    Wikler’s legacy as a Democratic leader will be the nationalization of the state party’s donor base—something he’s achieved by arguing that Wisconsin is at the epicenter of America’s political battle. Whether that’s good for democracy is another matter.

    The wealthy Democrats from California or Illinois who’ve done much of the donating are not ideal stand-ins for regular Wisconsinites. “Elections shouldn’t be a tug-of-war between a handful of billionaires on the right and a handful of billionaires on the left,” Matthew Rothschild, the former executive director of the Wisconsin Democracy Campaign, told me. “But Ben didn’t make the playing field. Republicans in Wisconsin made the playing field. The U.S. Supreme Court made the playing field.”

    If Wikler’s strategy is to make politics in Wisconsin national, he is also committed to hyperlocal campaigning: Democrats should have a presence everywhere, Wikler believes. Which is why the van drove another two hours west from Grafton to Baraboo for an annual agricultural-equipment expo.

    The state party’s Rural Caucus had set up a tent between the crop-spraying-drone display and a demonstration area for grinding forest products. Wikler gave a pep talk to some of his members before striding over to the Sauk County Republicans’ tent. “Hi, I’m the Democratic Party chair,” he said, extending his hand toward a trio of 60-something men chatting in the shade. For a few minutes, the four men went back and forth, a little awkwardly, about the successes and failures of the former Governor Walker and whether any of them were particularly excited about a second nomination of Trump. (They weren’t.) It was all pleasant enough.

    Then, as Wikler turned to leave, one of the men took him aside. “I gotta tell you something,” he said, in a low voice. “I spoke with a gentleman over at your tent this morning, and I have never met a finer man or had a more reasonable conversation.” Wikler beamed. “As a party chair, that’s a delight to hear,” he replied.

    We left Baraboo in the late afternoon for a volunteer picnic in Middleton, a leafy Madison suburb along Lake Mendota. The gathering was held in a lush backyard, full of unruly flowering shrubs and the kind of wacky animal lawn ornaments that seem to announce, A Democrat lives here!

    The yard was full of gray-haired volunteers from different neighborhood door-knocking teams. “I don’t think we could have done anything without Ben,” JoAnna Richard, the host of the event, told me. “His leadership has been key: his connections, and how we fundraise and organize year-round.” A few minutes later, Wikler was giving his third and final motivational speech of the day, thanking people for their work over the past few years. We’re “building something bigger than any of us,” he told them. “You’re at the heart of that project, in a place that is the most key furnace for democracy—the key engine, the center of the web.”

    Republicans are working hard for a rebound in Wisconsin. Later this month, they’ll host the first debate of the GOP presidential primary in Milwaukee, and the Republican National Convention will be held in the same city next summer. That national attention will be good for the state party, which has recently under-raised Democrats.

    “They’ve been very good at getting Hollywood money,” Brian Schimming, the state GOP chair, told me by phone, with what sounded like a mix of shade and envy. “It’s hard to compete with” the Democrats’ celebrities and wealthy out-of-state donors, he said. “I need to nationalize Wisconsin a bit more.”

    This time around, Republicans are certainly going to be more focused on fundraising. “Ben would be kidding himself if he thinks he or his successor can always win the money race,” Rothschild told me. But money is not the race that ultimately matters.

    “I’d rather have my problem than the problem Ben has, which is an extraordinarily unpopular sitting incumbent,” Schimming told me. “Our folks are really fired up about this race.”

    Wikler, in fact, does seem a little nervous. He worries about a low-turnout election—and that people aren’t taking seriously enough the very real possibility of a second Trump presidency. “In 2020, people were ready to do anything to beat Trump. I had people retiring early and moving to Wisconsin to volunteer,” he told me in the car. “None of that’s happening right now.”

    Every recent presidential election in Wisconsin has been decided on a razor-thin margin, and Wikler’s job is to engage more than just the highly educated, high-income activist types. He’ll need to stitch together a delicate coalition and get them all to fill out a ballot: young people in Dane County; Black voters in Milwaukee; moderates in the suburbs and the small cities around Green Bay. The hurdles are already high, and Biden doesn’t exactly get many people’s blood pumping. “I’ve been concerned about that since 2020,” Favreau said. “It’s easy to see a scenario where a couple people say, ‘[Biden’s] too old. I’m going back to Trump.’” It’s even easier to see a situation in which some Wisconsinites, weary of it all, simply don’t vote.

    In JoAnna Richard’s backyard in Middleton, Wikler was winding up his pep talk, a little breathlessly. They’d be working “throughout this year, and into next spring in the local elections, and into next fall in 2024,” he said. “And then we’ll continue six months after that in the 2025 local elections! And the next state-supreme-court race—”

    A few people audibly sighed at this point, likely in anticipation of another two exhausting years door knocking and phone banking and envelope licking in defense of democracy. A man near me shouted, “We’re tired!” But that moment of wavering enthusiasm lasted only a fraction of a second before the whole group began to laugh.

    Sure, they’re tired. But for Wikler, they’ll show up.

    Will everyone else?

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    Elaine Godfrey

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  • George Soros hands control of his $25 billion empire to his son Alex

    George Soros hands control of his $25 billion empire to his son Alex

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    George Soros, billionaire and founder of Soros Fund Management LLC, speaks during an event on day two of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Tuesday, May 24, 2022.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Philanthropist billionaire George Soros confirmed that he is handing control of his $25 billion empire to his son Alex.

    Soros, 92, has a net worth of $6.7 billion, according to Forbes, and is the one of the top 400 richest people in the world. In 2017, he shifted $18 billion from his family office to his Open Society Foundations — a group of charities that works in more than 100 countries — which Alex was named chair of in December.

    Alex, speaking to the Wall Street Journal in an exclusive interview published over the weekend, said he is “more political” than his father and hinted at a significant financial role for the Soros organization in the U.S. elections next year. The Open Society Foundations did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment but a spokesperson did confirm the details of the interview with the Reuters news agency.

    Voicing his concerns on a potential return of former U.S. President Donald Trump, the 37-year-old Soros told the Wall Street Journal: “As much as I would love to get money out of politics, as long as the other side is doing it, we will have to do it, too.”

    The older Soros, often targeted by right-wing conspiracists, has been one of the U.S. Democratic Party’s largest donors — donating some $140 million to politically charged advocacy organizations and ballot initiatives in 2021.

    Referred to as the man who “broke the Bank of England” after he shorted the British pound in 1992, reportedly making a profit of $1 billion, George Soros left Hungary at the age of 17 to attend the London School of Economics working as a railway porter and waiter.

    Billionaire Elon Musk recently took to Twitter to attack Soros after his Soros Fund Management cut its stake in Tesla. Musk alleged that he “hates humanity” and that he “wants to erode the very fabric of civilization.” Soros, in the WSJ article, described himself as the “go-to man when they want to blame someone.”

    NEW YORK, NY – JUNE 06: Alexander Soros speaks during 2017 Gordon Parks Foundation Awards Gala at Cipriani 42nd Street on June 6, 2017 in New York City. (Photo by Ilya S. Savenok/Getty Images)

    Ilya S. Savenok | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

    Musk defended his comments in an interview with CNBC’s David Faber, saying that he doesn’t care if his inflammatory tweets scare away investors or customers. “I’ll say what I want, and if the consequence of that is losing money, so be it,” Musk told CNBC.

    Soros’ eldest son and Alex’s older half-brother Jonathan Soros, founder and chief executive officer of private investment firm JS Capital Management, was previously believed to be the “clear successor,” the Journal reported.

    Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

    “I didn’t want the foundation to be taken over by one of my children, as a matter of principle. I thought it should be managed by someone who is best suited,” George Soros told the publication, adding that Alex has “earned” his trust.

    According to an excerpt on the Open Society Foundations’ website, George Soros was quoted as saying: “My success in the financial markets has given me a greater degree of independence than most other people.”

    “I believe that in philanthropy one should do the right thing, whether or not it succeeds.”

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  • Ron DeSantis’s Joyless Ride

    Ron DeSantis’s Joyless Ride

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    Real-life Ron DeSantis was here, finally. In the fidgety flesh; in Iowa, South Carolina, and, in this case, New Hampshire. Not some distant Sunshine State of potential or idealized Donald Trump alternative or voice in the far-off static of Twitter Spaces. But an actual human being interacting with other human beings, some 200 of them, packed into an American Legion hall in the town of Rochester.

    “Okay, smile, close-up,” an older woman told the Florida governor, trying to pull him in for another photo. DeSantis and his wife, Casey, had just finished a midday campaign event, and the governor was now working a quick rope line—emphasis on quick and double emphasis on working. The fast-talking first lady is much better suited to this than her halting husband. He smiled for the camera like the dentist had just asked him to bite down on a blob of putty; like he was trying to make a mold, or to fit one. It was more of a cringe than a grin.

    “Governor, I have a lot of relatives in Florida,” the next selfie guy told him. Everybody who meets DeSantis has relatives in Florida or a time-share on Clearwater Beach or a bunch of golf buddies who retired to the Villages. “Wow, really?” DeSantis said.

    He was trying. But this did not look fun for him.

    Retail politicking was never DeSantis’s gift. Not that it mattered much before, in the media-dominated expanse of Florida politics, where DeSantis has proved himself an elite culture warrior and troller of libs. DeSantis was reelected by 19 points last November. He calls himself the governor of the state “where woke goes to die,” which he believes will be a model for his presidency of the whole country, a red utopia in his own image.

    What does the on-paper promise of DeSantis look like in practice? DeSantis has performed a number of these in-person chores in recent days, after announcing his presidential campaign on May 24 in a glitchy Twitter Spaces appearance with Elon Musk.

    As I watched him complete his rounds in New Hampshire on Thursday—visits to a VFW hall, an Elks Club, and a community college, in addition to the American Legion post—the essential duality of his campaign was laid bare: DeSantis is the ultimate performative politician when it comes to demonstrating outrage and “kneecapping” various woke abuses—but not so much when it comes to the actual in-person performance of politics.

    The campaign billed his appearance in Rochester as a “fireside chat.” (The outside temperature was 90 degrees, and there was no actual fire.) The governor and first lady also held fireside chats this week at a welding shop in Salix, Iowa, and at an event space in Lexington, South Carolina. The term conjures the great American tradition started by President Franklin D. Roosevelt during the Great Depression. Those were scary times—grim visages of malnourished kids and food riots and businessmen selling pencils on the street. FDR’s cozy evenings around the radio hearth were meant to project comfort and avuncular authority.

    Sitting on gray armchairs onstage in Rochester—Casey cross-legged and Ron man-spread—the DeSanti reassured their audience that the Florida governor was the candidate best equipped to protect Americans from contemporary threats no less serious than stock-market crashes and bank closures. He was focused on a distinct set of modern menaces: “woke indoctrination” and “woke militaries” and “woke mind viruses” and “woke mobs” that endanger every institution of American life. He used woke more than a dozen times at each event (I counted).

    Also, DeSantis said he’s a big supporter of “the death penalty for pedophiles” (applause); reminded every audience that he’d sent dozens of migrants to “beautiful Martha’s Vineyard” (bigger applause); and promised to end “this Faucian dystopia” around COVID once and for all (biggest applause).

    Also, George Soros (boo).

    Casey talked at each New Hampshire stop about the couple’s three young children, often in the vein of how adorably naughty they are—how they write on the walls of the governor’s mansion with permanent markers and leave crayon stains on the carpets. Ron spoke in personal terms less often, but when he did, it was usually to prove that he understands the need to protect kids from being preyed upon by the various and ruthless forces of wokeness. One recurring example on Thursday involved how outrageous it is that in certain swim competitions, a girl might wind up being defeated by a transgender opponent. “I’m particularly worried about this as the father of two daughters,” DeSantis told the Rochester crowd.

    This played well in the room full of committed Republicans and likely primary voters, as it does on Fox. Clearly, this is a fraught and divisive issue, but one that’s been given outsized attention in recent years, especially in relation to the portion of the population it directly affects. By comparison, DeSantis never mentioned gun violence, the leading cause of death for children in this country, including many in his state (the site of the horrific Parkland massacre of 2018, the year before he became governor). DeSantis readily opts for the culture-war terrain, ignoring the rest, pretty much everywhere he goes.

    His whole act can feel like a clunky contrivance—a forced persona railing against phony or hyped-up outrages. He can be irascible. Steve Peoples, a reporter for the Associated Press, approached DeSantis after a speech at a VFW hall in Laconia and asked the governor why he hadn’t taken any questions from the audience. “Are you blind?” DeSantis snapped at Peoples. “Are you blind? Okay, so, people are coming up to me, talking to me [about] whatever they want to talk to me about.”

    No one in the room cared about this little outburst besides the reporters (who sent a clip of it bouncing across social media within minutes). And if the voters did care, it would probably reflect well on DeSantis in their eyes, demonstrating his willingness to get in the media’s face.

    Journalists who managed to get near DeSantis this week unfailingly asked him about Donald Trump, the leading GOP candidate. In Rochester, NBC’s Gabe Gutierrez wondered about the former president’s claim that he would eliminate the federal government’s “administrative state” within six months of a second term. “Why didn’t you do it when you had four years?” DeSantis shot back.

    In general, though, DeSantis didn’t mention Trump without being prompted—at least not explicitly. He drew clear, if barely veiled, contrasts. “I will end the culture of losing in the Republican Party,” he vowed Thursday night in Manchester. Unsaid, obviously, is that the GOP has underperformed in the past three national elections—and no one is more to blame than Trump and the various MAGA disciples he dragged into those campaigns.

    “Politics is not about building a brand,” DeSantis went on to say. What matters is competence and conviction, not charisma. “My husband will never back down!” Casey added in support. In other words: He is effective and he will follow through and actually do real things, unlike you-know-who.

    “Politics is not about entertainment,” DeSantis said in all of his New Hampshire speeches, usually at the end. He might be trying to prove as much.

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    Mark Leibovich

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  • Criticizing “Soros-Funded DAs,” Ron DeSantis Promotes Fundraiser for Subway Killer

    Criticizing “Soros-Funded DAs,” Ron DeSantis Promotes Fundraiser for Subway Killer

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    Late Friday night, Florida Governor and likely 2024 presidential candidate Ron DeSantis blasted out a tweet responding to news that Daniel Penny, the 24-year-old former Marine who choked a homeless man named Jordan Neely to death on the New York City subway, had been arraigned in Manhattan on charges of second-degree manslaughter. “We must defeat the Soros-Funded DAs, stop the Left’s pro-criminal agenda, and take back the streets for law abiding citizens,” DeSantis wrote. “We stand with Good Samaritans like Daniel Penny. Let’s show this Marine… America’s got his back.” 

    DeSantis’s tweet, which has millions of views, linked to an online fundraiser for Penny’s legal defense. By Saturday morning, it appeared that the fund had grown by over $200,000. The flurry of donations supporting Penny’s vigilantism recalls the canonization of Kyle Rittenhouse, who also raised hundreds of thousands in the lead-up to his 2021 murder trial. 

    DeSantis’s reference to “Soros-Funded DAs”—an age-old antisemitic conspiracy theory frequently invoked against Hungarian-born, liberal Jewish billionaire George Soros—revives one of the Florida governor’s favorite hobbyhorses. In late March, after a Manhattan grand jury indicted Donald Trump for hush money payments to adult film star Stormy Daniels, DeSantis avoided referring to Trump by name, but did lash out at “Soros-backed Manhattan District Attorney” Alvin Bragg, who is charged with prosecuting the former president. Bragg is also prosecuting Daniel Penny. Last August, DeSantis also suspended a liberal state attorney who had refused to enforce the state’s draconian policies on abortion and gender affirming care, calling him a “Soros-backed state attorney.” 

    It’s fairly obvious why DeSantis is juicing these conspiracies. Just this morning, The New York Times released a report detailing DeSantis’s pre-presidential campaign woes: “Allies have abandoned him. Tales of his icy interpersonal touch have spread. Donors have groused.” 

    DeSantis may have a more personal reason for labeling political opponents with the Soros slur as well. In February, erstwhile Arizona Republican gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake, who once praised DeSantis for having “BDE” (“Big DeSantis Energy,” of course), tweeted an article reporting that Soros had endorsed the Florida governor. (Soros had simply said he thought DeSantis was the “likely” nominee.) A month later, Trump shared a Truth Social post that nicknamed DeSantis “Ron DeSoros.” Earlier in May, The New York Times reported that the nickname had appeared more than 12,000 times on news and social media sites since January. 

    In response, DeSantis has doubled down on some of the ultra-MAGA right’s favorite anti-vaxx and election denial conspiracy theories. “It’s a tug of war over who is going to grab the all-important conspiracy constituency,” one professor who studies QAnon told the Times

    Perhaps the greatest irony of DeSantis’s attack on “the Left’s pro-criminal agenda”, however, is this: Florida’s murder rate is much higher than New York’s.

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    Jack McCordick

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  • Conservatives Boycott Computers After Noticing Keyboard Can Be Used To Type ‘Trans’

    Conservatives Boycott Computers After Noticing Keyboard Can Be Used To Type ‘Trans’

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    NAMPA, ID—Expressing their dismay with yet another product overtaken by the liberal conspiracy to destroy traditional lifestyles, conservatives around the country reportedly began boycotting computers Friday after noticing their keyboards could be used to type the word “trans.” “These woke keyboards are attempting to force conservative fingers to type ‘trans,’ and I call on my fellow American patriots to destroy their computers immediately,” said local conservative man Bryce Whitten, adding that this was just another attempt by the global woke conspiracy to compel Americans to use the establishment alphabet. “I hate to think of the damage these anti-American computers have already done. I’ve used computers for years, but yesterday I found myself typing out the word ‘trans,’ and it hit me—this is an obvious effort by Marxist left-wing corporations like Apple and Microsoft, probably funded by George Soros, to make us type things we don’t want to type. They even have the T and R keys right next to each other to subliminally encourage innocent people to type ‘trans.’ I tried removing the T, R, A, N, and S keys, but then I realized I could still type ‘woke,’ and that was it for me. Who knows how deep into the alphabet this conspiracy goes. For Christ’s sake, they’re trying to market these computers to children! I urge my fellow conservatives to remove all computing devices with keyboards from their children’s hands so they can’t be groomed!” At press time, sources confirmed conservatives across the nation were trying to escape the woke conspiracy of left-wing letters by renouncing the English language entirely.

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  • India hits back after George Soros says Adani troubles will greatly weaken Modi’s grip on power

    India hits back after George Soros says Adani troubles will greatly weaken Modi’s grip on power

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    NDIA – JANUARY 18: Prime Minister Narendra Modi with Gautam Adani, chairman and founder of the Adani Group, and other delegates at Vibrant Gujarat Global Summit, at Mahatma Mandir Exhibition cum Convention Centre, on January 18, 2019 in Gandhinagar, India.

    Hindustan Times | | Getty Images

    India slammed billionaire investor George Soros after he alleged the Adani turmoil will weaken Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s grip on power and lead to a “democratic revival” in the country.

    The latest dispute highlights renewed scrutiny on the relationship between India’s leader and business tycoon Gautam Adani, who has lost billions in net worth since a short seller report accused his companies of fraud. The Adani Group has denied those allegations, calling the report a “calculated attack on India.”

    Last week, Soros criticized the prime minister saying India was a democracy but Modi “is no democrat.” Over the weekend, India’s foreign minister, Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, told a conference in Sydney that Soros’ comments were typical of a “Euro-Atlantic view” and rejected his accusations.

    “There are still people in the world who believe that their definition, their preferences, their views must override everything else,” Jaishankar said.

    He added there was “a debate and conversation that we must have on democracy,” including whose values defined a democracy as the world rebalanced and became less Euro-Atlantic.

    “He is old, rich, opinionated and dangerous, because what happens is, when such people and such views and such organizations — they actually invest resources in shaping narratives” Jaishankar said in a response to a question about the billionaire’s remarks.

    India’s voters will decide “how the country should [be] run,” the foreign minister said.

    “It worries us. We are a country that went through colonialism. We know the dangers of what happens when there’s outside interference,” Jaishankar added.

    Modi-Adani ‘close allies’

    Soros’ criticism focused on the cozy relationship between Modi and Adani.

    “Modi and business tycoon Adani are close allies; their fate is intertwined. Adani Enterprises tried to raise funds in the stock market, but he failed,” said Soros.

    Both men hail from India’s Western state of Gujarat. Adani was an early supporter of Modi’s political aspirations and championed the Indian leader’s growth vision for the country. Modi flew in an Adani jet after he was elected to national office in 2014. 

    But Adani lost his crown as Asia’s wealthiest man in a matter of days after short-seller firm Hindenburg Research alleged fraud. The Adani Group has denied wrongdoing and fired back at the firm in an over 400-page rebuttal.

    “Adani is accused of stock manipulation and his stock collapsed like a house of cards. Modi is silent on the subject, but he will have to answer questions from foreign investors and in parliament,” Soros said.

    The billionaire predicted Adani’s troubles will “significantly weaken Modi’s stranglehold on India’s federal government” and “open the door to push for much needed institutional reforms.”  

    “I may be naive, but I expect a democratic revival in India,” Soros said.

    The Hungarian-born investor is the founder of the Open Society Foundations advocacy network, through which he has donated more than $32 billion, according to its website. The network said it gives “thousands of grants every year toward building inclusive and vibrant democracies,” with active projects in more than 120 countries.

    Adani’s fall draws fire

    Opposition critics have also seized on the Hindenburg report to attack Modi and his party ahead of national elections set for next year. India’s main opposition Congress party has staged protests and demanded an investigation into Hindenburg’s allegations. 

    However, the opposition party was quick to distance itself from Soros’ comments.

    “Whether the PM-linked Adani scam sparks a democratic revival in India depends entirely on the Congress, opposition parties and our electoral process,” tweeted Jairam Ramesh, Congress’ general secretary. “It has NOTHING to do with George Soros.”

    Politically, it’s hard to predict what effect, if any, the Adani scrutiny will have on Modi’s popularity and his ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, observers said.

    Still, the relationship between Modi and Adani is “so long and strong” it will be tough for the prime minister and his party to wriggle out of this crisis unscathed, Ashok Swain, head of the department of peace and conflict research at Uppsala University in Sweden told CNBC recently.

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  • So-Called ‘Self-Made’ Billionaires Who Actually Grew Up Wealthy

    So-Called ‘Self-Made’ Billionaires Who Actually Grew Up Wealthy

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    While the 1% may think they made their own fortunes, it’s more than likely that they had wealthy parents. Here are the so-called “self-made” billionaires who actually grew up privileged.

    Read more…

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