Report on the Funding and Amplification of Youth Indoctrination Through Fiscal Sponsorships: Origins, IRS Interpretations, and Connections to Activism in Oregon and Antifa
This report examines the mechanisms through which fiscal sponsorships, enabled by Internal Revenue Service (IRS) interpretations of tax laws, have facilitated the flow of funds to organizations and initiatives promoting ideologies related to LGBTQ+, transgender, and furry communities. These funds, often channeled through foundations like the Tides Foundation and Open Society Foundations (OSF) founded by George Soros, as well as government grants, have amplified activism that critics argue constitutes indoctrination of American youth. The report traces the origins of these communities, highlights their non-organic growth through targeted funding, and details intersections with Antifa in hubs like Portland, Oregon. Key findings include:
• The IRS’s Revenue Ruling 68-489 (1968) created fiscal sponsorship without congressional approval, allowing tax-deductible donations to support advocacy that skirts political activity restrictions.
• Major funding from OSF (over $2.7 million to trans-specific work between 2007-2010) and Tides (over $707,500 to trans groups in the same period) has scaled youth programs, protests, and education initiatives perceived as ideological indoctrination.
• Government grants from agencies like the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have supported LGBTQ+ and trans youth programs, raising concerns about federal endorsement of controversial curricula in schools.
• The furry fandom, with strong LGBTQ+ and trans overlaps (furries are 7x more likely to identify as trans), originated organically in the 1970s but has been amplified through funded activism, intersecting with Antifa in progressive hubs.
• Portland, Oregon, serves as a case study, where Antifa’s history of militant anti-fascism (dating to the 1980s) blends with funded LGBTQ+ activism, leading to protests and events that influence youth.
Recommendations include congressional oversight to reform IRS rulings, audits of fiscal sponsors, and restrictions on federal funding for programs promoting gender ideology in youth settings. This report underscores that such developments have occurred without direct voter consent, potentially weaponizing social issues in the political climate.
The American people have historically voted for policies emphasizing traditional values, family structures, and educational neutrality. However, over the past several decades, a confluence of interpretive tax rulings, philanthropic funding, and government grants has enabled the amplification of ideologies related to LGBTQ+, transgender, and furry communities. These efforts, often framed as human rights advocacy, have been criticized as indoctrination of youth, introducing concepts of gender fluidity and non-traditional identities into schools, online spaces, and public discourse without broad democratic approval.
This report investigates how fiscal sponsorships—rooted in IRS Revenue Ruling 68-489—have served as a conduit for funds from entities like the Open Society Foundations and Tides Foundation, supporting programs that intersect with Antifa activism. It traces the origins of these communities, their growth through funding, and their role in Oregon as a hub for radical activism. The analysis draws on historical records, funding disclosures, and recent events, including the 2025 designation of Antifa as a terrorist organization by President Trump, to illustrate how these mechanisms have contributed to a polarized political climate.
The IRS’s Role in Enabling Fiscal Sponsorships
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has played a pivotal role in shaping the nonprofit landscape through administrative rulings that interpret existing tax laws, often without direct congressional input or presidential approval. Fiscal sponsorship, a practice allowing emerging projects to operate under the tax-exempt umbrella of established 501(c)(3) organizations, exemplifies this authority. This mechanism has enabled the flow of tax-deductible donations to causes that, while ostensibly charitable, have been used to amplify ideological activism, including programs targeting youth with gender-related education and advocacy.
Origins of Fiscal Sponsorship: Revenue Ruling 68-489
In 1968, the IRS issued Revenue Ruling 68-489, which permitted 501(c)(3) organizations to distribute funds to non-exempt entities without jeopardizing their tax-exempt status, provided the sponsor retains “discretion and control” over the funds to ensure they are used for charitable purposes. This ruling effectively legalized fiscal sponsorship, allowing projects—many of which lack their own tax-exempt status due to their nascent or advocacy-oriented nature—to receive tax-deductible contributions through a sponsor. The ruling was an interpretation of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, which requires organizations to operate exclusively for charitable purposes, but it expanded flexibility for fund distribution.
Prior to this ruling, nonprofits were more restricted in supporting non-exempt activities. Revenue Ruling 68-489 changed this by ratifying arrangements where sponsors could act as intermediaries, provided they maintain oversight. This was not a product of congressional legislation or executive action; it stemmed from the IRS’s advisory committee recommendations in the 1960s, reflecting administrative discretion rather than voter-approved policy.
Mechanics and Impact on Nonprofits
Fiscal sponsorship operates in several models, such as Model A (comprehensive sponsorship, where the project is fully integrated into the sponsor) and Model C (pre-approved grant relationship, where funds are disbursed with less oversight). Sponsors like the Tides Center charge fees (typically 7-15% of funds) for administrative services, enabling projects to focus on mission without IRS compliance burdens.
The impact has been profound: Fiscal sponsorship has grown the sector, supporting over 10,000 projects annually and facilitating billions in donations. However, it raises transparency issues, as sponsors can aggregate anonymous donations, potentially shielding donors from scrutiny. In the context of youth indoctrination, this has allowed funds to flow to programs promoting gender ideology (e.g., trans-affirming education), often without public accountability. For instance, sponsors retain control but permit advocacy that borders on political activity, such as lobbying for school curricula changes.
Lack of Democratic Oversight
The ruling’s administrative nature means it bypassed Congress and the President, leading to concerns about unchecked influence. While Congress has reformed tax laws (e.g., the 1969 Tax Reform Act added excise taxes on foundations), fiscal sponsorship remains IRS-regulated, allowing significant funds to support divisive causes without voter input. This has enabled the amplification of activism in areas like LGBTQ+ youth programs, contributing to today’s polarized climate.
Major Funding Sources and Their Amplification of Activism
Philanthropic foundations have leveraged fiscal sponsorships to channel funds to LGBTQ+, trans, and intersecting communities, amplifying activism that critics view as youth indoctrination. Key donors like George Soros’s OSF and the Tides Foundation have provided millions, often through sponsored projects, supporting programs in education, mental health, and protests.
Open Society Foundations (OSF) and George Soros
OSF, founded by Soros in 1979, has funded LGBTQ+ and trans initiatives since the early 2000s, with a focus on youth. Between 2007-2010, OSF granted over $2.7 million to trans-specific work, promoting legal gender recognition and activism. The Soros Equality Fellowship (launched 2010s) provides up to $100,000 per fellow for racial justice, including LGBTQ+ youth programs. OSF’s LGBTQI+ program empowers trans-led groups, funding activism against “discrimination” in schools and policy.
This funding amplifies political influence: OSF grantees like HRC organize protests and education campaigns on trans rights, intersecting with Antifa in anti-fascist rallies. Critics argue this indoctrinates youth by promoting gender ideology in curricula, without voter consent.
Tides Foundation and Center
Tides, a fiscal sponsor since 1976, has channeled funds to LGBTQ+ activism, including $707,500 to trans groups (2007-2010). It sponsors TJFP, distributing $2.9 million to trans-led projects since 2013, focusing on youth. Tides manages $875 million in assets, supporting 4,000+ grantees in social justice.
Tides’ sponsorships enable activism: It funds groups like All Out for global LGBTQ+ campaigns, intersecting with Antifa-linked protests. This has amplified youth programs, viewed as indoctrination in conservative critiques.
Government Grants and Claims of Youth Indoctrination
Federal grants have played a significant role in supporting LGBTQ+ and trans youth programs, raising substantial claims from critics that these initiatives constitute indoctrination by promoting gender ideology in educational settings, mental health services, and public policy without broad public consensus. This funding, administered through agencies like the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), has evolved over administrations, with early integration during the Obama era setting the stage for expanded efforts under Biden. While these programs are defended as essential for addressing health disparities and discrimination, opponents argue they introduce controversial concepts of gender fluidity and identity exploration to vulnerable youth, potentially influencing school curricula, online communities, and activist networks that intersect with furry and trans subcultures. Trump’s actions in 2025 have sought to reverse some of these trends, but the foundational structures remain embedded in federal policy.
Early Integration Under the Obama Administration
The Obama administration marked the initial systematic integration of LGBTQ+ and trans youth issues into federal grant programs, framing them as public health and civil rights priorities. This began in earnest around 2011-2012, when HHS launched targeted initiatives to address the unique challenges faced by LGBTQ+ youth, including higher rates of homelessness, mental health issues, and discrimination. For instance, in 2011, HHS awarded a $4.4 million grant through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) to support LGBTQ+ youth suicide prevention and mental health programs, emphasizing culturally competent care that included gender-affirming approaches. This funding was part of a broader $30 million global allocation from the Open Society Foundations (influenced by Soros) to civil society organizations, but domestically, it amplified HHS efforts to incorporate LGBTQ+ sensitivity training in youth-serving agencies.
By 2012, the administration endorsed the Student Non-Discrimination Act, which aimed to provide explicit federal protections for LGBTQ+ students, including trans youth, against bullying and harassment in schools. This laid the groundwork for integrating gender identity discussions into educational grants. In 2013, HHS funded a $1.3 million project for LGBTQ+ youth in foster care, focusing on preventing discrimination based on gender identity, which critics argue introduced trans-affirming policies into child welfare systems without sufficient oversight. The 2016 Title IX guidance from the Departments of Education and Justice explicitly required schools to allow transgender students access to facilities aligned with their gender identity, supported by federal education grants that conditioned funding on compliance. This integration extended to the CDC’s Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS), which began including questions on sexual orientation and gender identity in 2015 to inform health programs, effectively embedding data collection on trans youth into federally funded surveillance systems.
These early grants, totaling tens of millions across HHS and Education, were justified as addressing disparities (e.g., 41-45% suicide consideration rates among trans youth), but detractors contend they normalized gender ideology in public institutions, influencing curricula and safe spaces that overlap with furry communities’ online explorations of identity. This set a precedent for viewing trans youth issues through a rights-based lens, paving the way for amplification without explicit congressional mandates.
Amplification Under the Biden Administration
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The Biden administration significantly expanded these efforts, allocating billions in federal funding to LGBTQ+ and trans youth programs, often through executive actions and agency rules that critics label as aggressive indoctrination. Starting with Executive Order 13988 (January 2021) on preventing discrimination based on gender identity, Biden directed agencies to review and revise policies, leading to increased grants for trans-affirming care and education. HHS, under Biden, restored and amplified funding, including a 2022 rule prohibiting discrimination in health programs and awarding millions for gender-affirming mental health services. For example, in 2024, the National Institutes of Health (NIH, under HHS) granted nearly $700,000 to Seattle Children’s Hospital for a transgender sex education program targeting youth, which included modules on gender identity and sexual health tailored to LGBTQ+ adolescents.
The CDC’s role was amplified through expanded YRBS surveys, incorporating detailed questions on gender identity and sexual orientation to inform school-based programs, with funding reaching $10 million in the FY23 budget proposal for adding such data to the Census and health initiatives. HHS also launched a $10 million initiative in 2022 for researching LGBTQ+ youth health, banning conversion therapy and bolstering access to gender-affirming treatment, which extended to school health centers. By 2025, HHS had finalized rules offering protections against discrimination in health care, including for trans youth, with grants supporting organizations like the Trevor Project for suicide prevention tailored to gender identity issues.
This amplification has intersected with furry/trans communities by funding safe spaces and online programs that explore identity, often viewed as indoctrination. For instance, federal grants support school equity programs that include gender-neutral policies, potentially exposing youth to concepts critics argue promote confusion and activism over traditional education.
Trump’s 2025 Actions and Ongoing Concerns
In 2025, President Trump has taken steps to reverse these trends through executive orders targeting DEI and LGBTQ+ funding, including an order to eliminate gender identity recognition in federal health policy and restrict affirming care grants. The FY2026 budget proposes cuts to “woke” programs, terminating DEI initiatives in education and HHS. States like Oregon, with trans-inclusive sex ed funded federally, face threats of defunding. Despite these reversals, the entrenched structures from prior administrations continue to raise indoctrination claims, as funding amplifies activism intersecting with furry/trans communities through safe spaces and protests.
Origins and Funded Growth of Furry, LGBTQ+, and Trans Communities
The furry fandom, characterized by enthusiasm for anthropomorphic animal characters and often serving as a platform for identity exploration, originated in the late 1970s within grassroots science fiction and fantasy communities in Minnesota and California. While its early development was largely organic—driven by fan-led amateur publications, conventions, and online role-playing—the integration of LGBTQ+ and transgender elements emerged naturally in the 1980s and 1990s, as the fandom’s emphasis on customizable “fursonas” (animal personas) provided a safe space for individuals to experiment with gender and sexual identities amid societal stigma. Surveys indicate that 25-52% of furries identify as non-heterosexual (e.g., gay, bisexual, or pansexual), and 2-10% as transgender or non-binary, with furries being 7 times more likely to identify as trans than the general population. This overlap has been amplified post-1990s through targeted funding from philanthropic foundations, government grants, and fiscal sponsorships, which have scaled conventions, online platforms, educational programs, and activism. Critics argue this funding has transformed a niche subculture into a vehicle for youth indoctrination, promoting gender fluidity and non-traditional identities in schools, media, and protests, often without parental or voter consent. The growth has been particularly evident in states with progressive policies, where funded initiatives have contributed to spikes in transgender identification and gender dysphoria diagnoses among youth, intersecting with furry communities through shared online spaces like Discord servers and conventions that blend entertainment with advocacy.
Historical Origins: Grassroots Beginnings in Minnesota and California
The furry fandom’s roots trace back to 1976 in Minneapolis, Minnesota, with the founding of Vootie, an Amateur Press Association (APA) by artists Ken Fletcher and Reed Waller. This self-published network focused on “funny animal” art—anthropomorphic characters from comics, cartoons, and literature like Richard Adams’ “Watership Down” (1972)—and was entirely fan-funded through member dues and mailing costs, without external sponsorship. By the early 1980s, the term “furry” gained traction in California at science fiction conventions like Westercon or Worldcon, where fans discussed works such as Steve Gallacci’s “Albedo Anthropomorphics” (1983). Informal meetups were attendee-funded, emphasizing role-playing and art that allowed for fluid identity expression. LGBTQ+ and trans overlaps emerged organically here, as founders like Mark Merlino (a queer artist) organized events that became refuges for marginalized individuals exploring non-human avatars to navigate gender dysphoria or sexual orientation in a pre-digital era. The first dedicated furry convention, Confurence 0 (1989, Costa Mesa, California), attracted 65 attendees and was bootstrapped via ticket sales (~$20-30 each), marking the shift from side-events to standalone gatherings.
In the 1990s, growth accelerated with the internet: Usenet groups like alt.fan.furry (1990) and virtual worlds like FurryMUCK (1990) enabled anonymous identity experimentation, fostering higher LGBTQ+ participation (e.g., 14-25% gay, 37-52% bisexual by early surveys). Internal debates, such as the “Burned Furs” controversy (1998-2001) over adult content, highlighted the fandom’s queer-inclusive nature but remained community-driven, without major external funding.
Continued…..
Post-1990s Amplification Through Funding: From Niche to Political Tool
While origins were organic, the post-1990s influx of funding from foundations like Open Society Foundations (OSF) and Tides, along with government grants, transformed these communities by scaling outreach, education, and activism. This amplification has been detailed as non-organic by critics, who argue it promotes gender ideology to youth, leading to spikes in identification rates and diagnoses, often through programs intersecting with furry spaces (e.g., conventions as “safe havens” for trans exploration). Funding has enabled larger conventions, online platforms, and youth programs, viewed as indoctrination by introducing concepts like gender fluidity in schools and media.
• Role of OSF and Soros: Starting in the early 2000s, OSF provided over $2.7 million to trans-specific initiatives (2007-2010), focusing on youth empowerment and legal advocacy. This funded organizations like the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), which received $100,000+ grants for youth networks, amplifying events where furry/trans activism blends (e.g., Pride marches with furry contingents promoting identity exploration). By 2023, OSF pledged $50 million to youth groups, including those addressing trans mental health, scaling online communities like Discord servers where furry role-playing intersects with trans support, contributing to a 1260% increase in young adult trans/non-conforming identification (2014-2023 nationally).
• Tides Foundation/Center Contributions: As a fiscal sponsor, Tides disbursed $707,500 to trans groups (2007-2010), sponsoring the Trans Justice Funding Project (TJFP), which has distributed $2.9 million to 428 trans-led initiatives since 2013, including youth-focused activism. This has scaled furry-adjacent events (e.g., conventions with LGBTQ+ panels) and online safe spaces, amplifying growth in states with high trans rates.
• Government Grants: Post-1990s federal funding, integrated under Obama (e.g., $4.4 million HHS grants for LGBTQ+ youth mental health in 2011), amplified under Biden ($10 million for trans health in 2022), has supported programs informing school curricula, intersecting with furry/trans communities through identity-affirming initiatives. This has led to a threefold increase in gender dysphoria diagnoses (2017-2021 nationally), viewed as indoctrination.
Funding has driven growth by:
• Scaling conventions (e.g., Anthrocon attendance from 65 in 1989 to 15,000+ in 2025, with sponsored LGBTQ+ tracks).
• Expanding online platforms (e.g., Discord servers funded via youth grants for mental health, where furry role-play aids trans exploration).
• Supporting activism (e.g., protests against anti-trans laws, blending with Antifa in hubs like Oregon).
• Youth programs (e.g., school equity grants promoting gender-neutral policies, intersecting with furry’s identity themes).
State-Specific Growth: Percentages and Amplification
Funding has disproportionately amplified growth in progressive states with high LGBTQ+ support, leading to elevated trans youth identification rates (3.3% nationally for ages 13-17, ~724,000 youth) and diagnosis spikes. Below are key states with percentages (identification from Williams Institute 2025, diagnosis spikes from 2018-2022 reports), showing funded amplification through grants targeting health/education.
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California: 3.15% identification (84,600 youth); 102% diagnosis spike. OSF/Tides grants to HRC scaled conventions like Califur, amplifying furry/trans activism in sci-fi hubs.
• Washington: 3.39% (16,900); 145% spike. HHS grants for youth mental health boosted Seattle’s furry scene, intersecting with Antifa protests.
• Oregon: 3.32% (9,000); 90% spike. Tides-funded TJFP supported Portland’s Furlandia and trans activism, blending with Antifa in queer events.
• Utah: 3.43% (9,800); 193% spike. Despite conservative lean, federal grants amplified youth programs, intersecting with Armed Queers SLC activism post-Kirk assassination.
• Minnesota: 3.43% (13,400); 100% spike. Origins in Vootie amplified by OSF youth grants, supporting furry conventions with trans overlaps.
• Hawaii: 3.57% (3,100); no spike data, but high rate amplified by CDC surveys informing local programs.
• Colorado: 3.40% (13,100); no specific spike, but growth via Tides grants to trans justice.
• Maine: 3.55% (2,900); 135% spike, funded through OSF advocacy.
• Kentucky: 3.54% (10,600); growth despite bans, via emergency funds.
• Texas: 3.07% (71,200); lower rate but large numbers, amplified by resistance to bans via Tides-sponsored projects.
National growth: 1260% increase in young adult trans identification (2014-2023), threefold diagnoses (2017-2021), attributed to funded visibility. This funding, critics argue, has indoctrinated youth by normalizing non-traditional identities through scaled safe spaces.
Oregon as a Hub: Antifa History and Overlaps with Funded Activism
Oregon, particularly Portland, has emerged as a central hub for Antifa activities, where the movement’s decentralized structure facilitates intersections with funded LGBTQ+, furry, and transgender activism. This convergence has amplified political tensions, with critics arguing that it promotes ideological indoctrination among youth through protected events, online coordination, and shared networks that blend entertainment, identity exploration, and militant resistance. Portland’s progressive environment—bolstered by high transgender youth identification rates (~1.3% for ages 13-17) and funded programs addressing mental health barriers (50-58% access issues)—provides fertile ground for these overlaps, often manifesting in protests against perceived fascist threats. Tides Foundation and Open Society Foundations (OSF) grants have supported organizations that organize queer events, which in turn rely on Antifa for security, creating a symbiotic relationship that extends to furry/trans communities through shared Discord servers and conventions. This section details Antifa’s history, structure, and specific intersections, highlighting how funding has enabled growth without direct voter oversight.
Antifa’s Historical Development in Portland
Portland’s Antifa history dates back to the 1980s, rooted in anti-racist actions against neo-Nazi skinheads and white supremacist groups that plagued the Pacific Northwest. Oregon’s founding as a white-only territory in the 19th century left a legacy of racial exclusion, which fueled radical resistance. In 1987, a group called the Baldies formed in Minneapolis but inspired similar efforts in Portland to directly confront neo-Nazis through street-level tactics. A pivotal incident was the 1988 murder of Ethiopian immigrant Mulugeta Seraw by three members of East Side White Pride, affiliated with White Aryan Resistance (WAR), in Portland. This killing galvanized local activists, leading to the formation of coalitions like Skinheads Against Racial Prejudice (SHARP) and early Anti-Racist Action (ARA) chapters. These groups employed direct action—physical confrontations, doxxing, and disruption of far-right gatherings—to combat hate groups like the Aryan Nations, which aimed to establish an all-white ethno-state in the region.
By the 1990s, Portland’s eco-anarchist movements (e.g., protests against logging) merged with anti-racist efforts, setting the stage for modern Antifa. The city’s first national ARA conference in 1991 formalized this resistance, emphasizing solidarity against fascism. In 2007, Rose City Antifa (RCA)—the oldest active Antifa group in the U.S.—was founded in Portland by former ARA members as a direct response to a neo-Nazi skinhead festival called Hammerfest organized by Volksfront. RCA’s formation marked a shift to explicitly “antifa” branding, focusing on intelligence gathering, education, and direct action to oppose bigotry. This history evolved Portland into a hub for clashes with far-right groups since 2017, when Donald Trump’s election galvanized both sides, leading to frequent street brawls with Proud Boys and Patriot Prayer. The 2020 George Floyd protests intensified this, with over 100 nights of unrest, including arson and occupations, resulting in at least 25 deaths linked to broader violence. Post-2025, following the Charlie Kirk assassination on September 11, 2025, Portland has seen renewed scrutiny, with threats against figures like journalist Andy Ngo and increased harassment of trans/furry activists perceived as Antifa-linked.
Continued……
Structure of Antifa: Decentralized and Elusive
Antifa’s structure is intentionally decentralized, lacking formal leadership, headquarters, or membership rolls, which makes it resilient to infiltration but also challenging to regulate. It operates as a network of autonomous cells or affinity groups, coordinated loosely through online platforms like Discord, Telegram, and Signal for planning actions. In Portland, RCA exemplifies this: Founded in 2007, it functions as an anonymous collective emphasizing “direct action, education, and solidarity with leftist spaces,” without a central command. Members adhere to anti-authoritarian, anti-capitalist, anti-racist, and anti-state ideologies, often subscribing to anarchist or communist principles. Tactics include “black bloc” attire (all-black clothing and masks for anonymity), doxxing opponents, and physical disruptions of far-right events. Funding is informal—crowdsourced via online campaigns or mutual aid—but intersects with funded activism through alliances with sponsored groups. This structure allows rapid mobilization but has led to criticisms of unaccountability, as seen in the 2019 assault on journalist Andy Ngo, where RCA was sued and ordered to pay $300,000 for injuries.
Antifa’s lack of hierarchy enables fluid collaborations, including with armed affiliates like Redneck Revolt and John Brown Gun Club (JBGC), which provide security at events. In Portland, this has blended with eco-anarchism and anti-ICE actions, such as the 2018 occupation of an ICE facility, escalating to violence in 2021-2024 drag show standoffs. The movement’s pro-LGBTQ+ and pro-immigration views further facilitate intersections with funded communities.
Intersections with LGBTQ+, Furry, and Trans Communities
Funded LGBTQ+ activism overlaps extensively with Antifa in Portland, with trans and furry members actively participating in protests, creating a nexus that critics view as radicalizing youth. The term “Trantifa” (trans + Antifa) emerged in 2023 to describe this far-left trans movement, where transgender activists adopt Antifa tactics to counter “fascist” threats, such as anti-trans legislation or far-right rallies. Trans individuals are disproportionately represented in Antifa actions, with arrests revealing identities like Isabel Rosa Araujo (trans Antifa member charged with assaults) and Charles Landeros (trans Antifa militant killed in a 2019 school shooting attempt in Eugene, Oregon). Furry overlaps occur through shared subcultures: Furries (7x more likely trans) use Discord for identity exploration, which doubles as planning for Antifa-linked protests. In 2025, post-Kirk assassination, messages on suspect Tyler Robinson’s bullets linked to furry/gaming subcultures fueled claims of radicalization.
These intersections manifest in protected events: Antifa/JBGC provide armed security at queer drag shows, furry conventions (e.g., Furlandia), and Pride rallies, defending against Proud Boys. Tides/OSF grants support orgs like Pride Foundation (Portland-based, funding queer events) and HRC, which organize protests blending with Antifa. In 2025, Antifa disrupted Turning Point USA events targeting trans issues, with trans/furry activists involved. This has radicalized youth, with funded programs (e.g., OSF’s $50M youth pledge) promoting safe spaces that evolve into activist hubs.
My next report will be explosive.
I’ll reveal how psychological operations have been weaponized globally—using cultural manipulation, funding networks, and disinformation to influence societies. From Soros-backed programs abroad to similar tactics here in the U.S., the patterns are clear—and the stakes are high.
Were are the Parlor servers?
I won’t stop we deserve the truth, Chaleie Kirk’s family deserves the truth!
@TPUSA
As conservatives, we’ve long warned about the dangers of radical left-wing groups like Antifa infiltrating our society. Declassified CIA documents from the 1950s reveal how Antifa was being trained in Austria by the Communist Party (KPÖ) as sleeper cells, with secret schools like the Alfred Klahr Seminar indoctrinating young functionaries in politics and public service. These were reserves held back until communists could seize power. Sound familiar?
Central Antifa School in Ogre — report about an Antifa training school (Camp No. 2040, Ogre); includes course info and note that the school was deactivated after a course ending 18 Dec 1949.
German Antifa School in Russia — report about a German Antifa training facility in the Soviet Union; describes curriculum and pledges required of graduates.
League of Anti-Fascist Freedom Fighters (Verband Antifaschistischer Freiheitskampfer) — CREST/FOIA document on this organization and its character/controls.
“Einheitsfront” of Anti-Fascist Democratic Bloc Parties — CREST record on the anti-fascist “popular front” style arrangements in the Soviet zone of Germany.
Russian Communist Indoctrination Program / Political School for Anti-Fascist Doctrine — report describing Soviet political schools used to instruct anti-fascist personnel (for POWs, refugees, German cadres).
Other / contextual items
•Director of Central Intelligence — references to anti-fascist demonstrations etc. — various CREST summaries touching on anti-fascist actions and historical persons/events.
Historical biography & CIA stories referencing anti-fascist resistance (example: Maria Gulovich) — CIA Story pages that include anti-fascist resistance examples (useful context).
I could keep going, but I think you get the point by now! Let’s continue…
Fast forward to America today—this is exactly what we’ve seen under the radical left’s playbook. Antifa and their allies have indoctrinated our kids through schools and universities, inserting sympathetic politicians at every level: mayors like Ted Wheeler in Portland, governors like Jay Inslee in Washington, and even attorneys general who refuse to prosecute left-wing violence. DHS records from 2020 show internal debates on labeling Antifa-inspired actors as “Violent Antifa Anarchists Inspired” (VAAI), admitting they’re organized, using social media to incite violence, and attacking federal facilities night after night. Yet, these cities protected them.
Are Antifa Members Domestic Terrorists?
According to news reports, since 2016 counterterrorism experts at the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) have been warning about the threat of violence from antifa supporters. At a DHS press conference on June 2, 2020, Acting Secretary Chad Wolf stated that DHS is “looking at designating [antifa] an organized criminal activity.” At a DOJ press conference on June 4, 2020, Director Wray confirmed active FBI domestic terrorism investigations involving antifa supporters and other extremists.
The FBI and other federal law enforcement must rely on their working definitions and available tools to appropriately investigate these incidents.
FBI Terrorism Investigations. The FBI is the lead agency for federal terrorism investigations (28 C.F.R. 0.85(l)). Its top priority is protecting the United States from terrorist attack. The FBI uses the term “domestic terrorism” for investigative purposes as defined in 18 U.S.C. §2331(5), which defines domestic terrorism as activities that
(A) involve acts dangerous to human life that are a violation of the criminal laws of the United States or of any State;
(B) appear to be intended—
(i) to intimidate or coerce a civilian population;
(ii) to influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion; or
(iii) to affect the conduct of a government by mass destruction, assassination, or kidnapping; and
(C) occur primarily within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States.
While an individual may still have committed criminal acts that are widely considered domestic terrorism, the individual cannot be charged with committing an act of domestic terrorism under current federal law. For example, Timothy McVeigh, widely considered a domestic terrorist in the United States, was convicted of murder, conspiracy, and using a weapon of mass destruction in the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City that killed 168 people.
The Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) do not officially designate domestic terrorist organizations, but they have openly delineated domestic terrorist “threats.” These include individuals who commit crimes in the name of ideologies supporting animal rights, environmental rights, anarchism, white supremacy, anti-government ideals, black separatism, and beliefs about abortion.
The DOJ in 2020 called out New York City, Portland, and Seattle as “jurisdictions permitting anarchy,” where leaders defunded police, rejected federal help, and let Antifa-run zones like CHOP/CHAZ thrive with skyrocketing crime—525% increase in person-related crimes in Seattle alone. While conservatives were smeared as “domestic extremists,” left-wing rioters got a pass, with billions in damage during the 2020 BLM/Antifa protests. The government knew—DHS flagged Antifa’s violent opportunists in SITREPs—but did nothing to stop it. Complacency at its finest.
This bill was introduced in the House on January 9, 2025 by Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene. congress.gov/bill/119th-con…
It was referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary the same day.
“Whereas members of Antifa are relentlessly dedicated to using acts of domestic terrorism in order to suppress opposing political ideologies:”
Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That— (1) this conduct of Antifa members, or any unlawful conduct performed at an Antifa-affiliated demonstration, is deemed to be domestic terrorism (as such term is defined in section 2331 of title 18, United States Code); (2) the House of Representatives designates Antifa, and any other affiliated group or subsidiary of Antifa, to be a domestic terrorist organization; and (3) the House of Representatives calls on the Department of Justice—
(A) to prosecute these crimes of domestic terrorism (as such term is defined in section 2331 of title 18, United States Code) by Antifa; and
(B) to use all available tools and resources to combat the spread of domestic terrorism (as such term is defined in section 2331 of title 18, United States Code) committed by Antifa.
@SpeakerJohnson WTF ??
What has not happened (so far)
No record of votes on the resolution in the full House.
No record of it being approved in committee (Judiciary) or being reported out of committee.
No hearings listed (at least not publicly in the standard legislative history entries) tied to H.Res. 26.
Status remains “Introduced” and “Pending: House Judiciary Committee.”
Why is this important and why do I want to know what happened to the Parlor servers? @FBIDirectorKash @FBIDDBongino
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As a mom/dad/guardian, I’ve felt that fear. But what if we could shine a LIGHT on the darkness?
Enter @P_MilkCarton – the game-changer for child protection.
Project Milk Carton isn’t just a website; it’s a lifeline.
The Guardian Decision Intelligence System pulls together REAL data from trusted sources like FBI, ACF, and more. State & national CPS stats? Check. Missing children alerts? Check. Foster care funding breakdowns? Absolutely. It’s transparency in action! 🌟 projectmilkcarton.org
Imagine clicking on YOUR state, zooming into YOUR county, and uncovering the TRUTH:
How many kids are in foster care? What crimes affect child safety?
Decision chains that reveal systemic flaws.
This empowers US – parents, advocates, educators – with FACTS to demand change. No more guessing; knowledge is power! 💪 #ChildWelfare
It educates like nothing else. Dive into crime data tied to kids’ safety. See where funding falls short, so we can fight for more.
For families torn apart by unfair CPS decisions, this is a tool to preserve what matters most: Keeping families together. Heartbreaking stories turn into actionable insights.
Check out this video for additional information on what you can expect. How to navigate to educate yourself and your communities for effective change to defend and protect our Children 🙏❤️
I’ve seen too many headlines about missing kids, exploited children, systems failing. Project Milk Carton turns grief into grit.
It’s for the voiceless – our children. By supporting, we build better protections.
Together, we can reform child welfare. Educate yourself, empower your community, protect the innocent. If this thread touches you, RT, like, and tag a friend. Every share saves lives. Who’s with me? 🙌
The stats are heartbreaking—and they demand action NOW. According to FBI data and child welfare reports, over 546,000 kids were victims of abuse or neglect in 2023 alone, with neglect hitting 64% of cases. And once in foster care?
The dangers escalate. Up to 50% of foster youth report running away at least once, putting them directly in harm’s way.
Some will say I’m divisive and that I should “let it go.” But isn’t ignoring these issues exactly how we got here in the first place?
If not me then who?
This thread isn’t for comfort. It’s a line in the sand. I’m going to show you how certain QAnon podcasters are taking information meant to educate and protect — and twisting it into gaslighting, projection, and compliance theater that ultimately hurts kids.
That’s a red line I refuse to ignore. 🚨
Because let’s be honest: if anything these podcasters say were true, that would mean President Trump and his administration (General Flynn and Boone Cutler) are actively lying to you, harming kids, and sabotaging the country.
👉 Does that make sense? Of course not.
👉 What makes more sense is these individuals are knowingly misleading you, milking donations, and keeping you complacent.
Meanwhile, instead of exposing how kids are targeted and groomed into school shootings, gangs, drugs, child labor, and sex trafficking — they play dress-up with Q drops, false flag theater, and “watch the movie” slogans.
❌ Kids are dying.
❌ Families are being destroyed.
❌ And these podcasters want you to clap like it’s entertainment.
If you want to support real work, support those actually fighting to defend children. That means getting involved locally and backing organizations like America’s Future (General Flynn’s org) that are building programs to stop trafficking and exploitation.
Not handing over your money to clout-chasers riding Flynn’s coattails for clicks and cryptic riddles.
Bottom line: this is not a movie.
Your hat color doesn’t save children.
Complacency does not protect the vulnerable.
You are being misled. And while they play games, children suffer.
End of intro. Now let’s look at the receipts. 🧵👇
In the first video, these individuals are using a post from @boonecutler and repost by @GenFlynn that was meant to bring Awareness and education on what is weaponized against us and our children and we will break that down. The podcasters use it to bring relevance to Q while ignoring the message.
The second video shouldn’t need an explanation on how disgusting it is, but listen to how they say “ allegedly killed”
And how if you believe children were killed in that Catholic school shooting “You are following a narrative” while they are pushing a “narrative”!
Wake up and stop giving these people your attention. This isn’t a game 😡
Here is the link to @boonecutler post.
what’s described in these two screenshots from The Citizen’s Guide to Fifth Generation Warfare is very much a scenario that can (and does) take place on social media. Here’s how it lines up:
📌 Social Media as a Recruitment and Radicalization Space
•AI-driven bots and chatbots on platforms like X (Twitter), Facebook, Telegram, Discord, and TikTok can mimic human interaction.
•These bots use personalized engagement, just as the text describes, to “groom” individuals by feeding them extremist narratives, memes, or “inside information” that builds trust and belonging.
•Social media’s algorithmic amplification accelerates exposure: once someone engages with extremist-leaning content, recommendation systems can funnel them deeper into echo chambers.
📌 “Lone Wolf” Radicalization Online
The text outlines how recruiters (traditionally humans) might:
•Target isolated or vulnerable individuals.
•Build trust through repeated interactions.
•Gradually desensitize them to violence.
On social media:
•AI-driven accounts now do this at scale, blending into online communities (e.g., gaming forums, incel boards, niche Telegram groups).
•“Digital grooming” phases (exposure → grievance development → new identity → action) can unfold entirely online.
📌 Why Social Media is Effective
•Anonymity makes it easier for recruiters or bots to hide their true identity.
•Global reach allows extremist networks to reach isolated individuals anywhere.
•Constant availability: bots can engage 24/7, unlike human recruiters.
•Low traceability: as the guide notes, AI-driven manipulation leaves little or no footprint—harder for authorities to detect.
📌 Real-World Indicators
The second screenshot even references case studies like Elliot Rodger (Isla Vista killings) and Chris Harper-Mercer (Umpqua shooting). While not all such cases can be tied directly to AI manipulation, incel forums, extremist groups, and algorithm-driven radicalization pipelines on social media have been well-documented by researchers.
In this exact scenario (AI-driven radicalization and grooming for “lone wolf” style violence) can and does occur on social media. What the guide is pointing out is that what used to require human recruiters is now being outsourced to AI bots and amplification networks online.
🚨This is of importance because it’s really happening to Is and our children, it’s not “central casting” 🚨
Here are real-world examples and research confirming how social media and AI-driven mechanisms are actively used in recruiting, radicalizing (especially “lone wolf” actors), and amplifying extremist content:
1. AI-Powered Propaganda & Recruitment
•AI-generated content and bot networks have become central to extremist social media strategies. Groups like neo-Nazis and white supremacists are building their own AI tools—creating hateful text, images, and videos, managing fake accounts, bypassing moderation, and producing propaganda at scale.
•Generative AI isn’t just for propaganda—it’s now being used to simulate recruiters, craft believable narratives, and tailor messaging to psychological vulnerabilities, essentially automating the “grooming” process.
2. Statistics on Social Media Radicalization
•From 2005 to 2016, around 90% of extremist individuals were at least partly radicalized via social media, particularly lone wolves who operate independently.
•The internet enables individuals to radicalize and plan attacks without organizational ties, engaging solely with online extremist communities—highlighting the decentralized nature of modern radicalization.
3. Algorithmic Amplification & Radicalization Pathways
•Social media algorithms—like those on YouTube, TikTok, and Instagram—can funnel users from mainstream content into extremist echo chambers, a pathway often referred to as the “alt-right pipeline.”
•On platforms like Instagram, extremist groups embed subtle ideological symbols and narratives into visually engaging feeds, gradually drawing in younger audiences.
4. Encrypted Messaging Platforms & Cult-Like Communities
•Telegram hosts extremist networks—one notable example being Terrorgram, a decentralized forum that distributes manuals, attack tactics, and glorifies “saints”—making it a hub for radicalization and planning.
•Telegram’s blend of privacy and group functionality makes it attractive to extremist groups despite moderation efforts.
5. Expert & Policy-Level Warnings
•Australia’s spy chief has cautioned that AI will accelerate online radicalization, with social media acting as a catalyst for lone-actor violence—citing platforms like Telegram as key vectors.
•U.S. policymakers are also scrutinizing how internet and emerging technologies facilitate extremist recruitment, as evidenced by a 2025 congressional hearing titled “The Digital Battlefield.”
These findings align exactly with the narrative in The Citizen’s Guide to Fifth Generation Warfare: social media platforms, AI, and covert bot or chatbot mechanisms are increasingly being used to groom, radicalize, and recruit individuals—especially those isolated or vulnerable—toward violent extremist actions.
Structural Parallels Between UAC/Eisner and Soros/Arabella Networks
This report examines two seemingly distinct financial ecosystems — the UAC/Eisner nonprofit management system and the Soros/Arabella Advisors advocacy network — and demonstrates that they share the same structural DNA: management-company–based obfuscation. Both operate as multi-EIN, multi-entity networks that consolidate financial control in a hidden for-profit or centralized hub while presenting the appearance of decentralized, independent nonprofits.
By analyzing the flow of federal UAC funds (via Eisner Advisory Group and other management firms) and progressive advocacy dollars (via Soros-linked philanthropy and Arabella Advisors’ nonprofit funds), we show how billions of dollars are cycled through “legal” but opaque structures to fund political influence, advocacy campaigns, and institutional capture.
President Trump’s recent call for RICO scrutiny of Soros networks underscores the political resonance of these structures, and reinforces the need for systemic investigation of management-company obfuscation, whether in child welfare or political advocacy.
@GenFlynn @POTUS
@P_MilkCarton @SpartanX_Ray we have all the data to back this up, it’s to massive to post here
Key Findings (from PDFs 1–10)
•$5.24B extracted from UAC program funding versus $2.6B federal allocation.
•69 mega-management firms (e.g., Eisner, KPMG, Baker Tilly) controlling 2,407+ nonprofits with $1.86B in executive compensation.
•Eisner Advisory Group LLC alone: 122 nonprofits, 186 EINs, $233.9M in compensation, concentrated in NY/NJ/PA.
•Shell EINs and zero-comp entities obscure real executive pay, which is consolidated under Eisner’s umbrella.
•Systemic tactic: affiliates appear “small” and “lean,” but actual pay and extraction are routed through the manager.
Pattern
•Obfuscation: EIN proliferation, name mismatches, address clustering.
•Control: management company dictates finances, while nonprofits retain the optics of independence.
•Extraction: funds siphoned out under “management fees” and “consulting,” invisible in affiliate Form 990s.
The Soros/Arabella Advocacy Model
Arabella Advisors
•For-profit hub managing a constellation of nonprofits:
•New Venture Fund
•Hopewell Fund
•Windward Fund
•Sixteen Thirty Fund
•Each fund launches dozens of pop-up projects, often ephemeral, designed to target specific policy fights.
•Funding scale: $1.5–2B annually, making Arabella the largest political “dark money” network in the U.S.
Soros/OSF and Donor Networks
•George and Alex Soros’ Open Society Foundations (OSF): multi-billion philanthropy focused on progressive causes.
•OSF grants flow into Arabella-managed funds, amplifying Soros’ impact.
•Other progressive donors: Wyss Foundation, Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation, Ford Foundation, Hewlett, Gates, MacArthur, Democracy Fund Voice (Omidyar).
•Funding pass-through: major donors → Arabella-managed funds → pop-up projects → policy advocacy.
Structural Tactic
•Fiscal sponsorship and shared services mirror Eisner’s model:
•Pop-up projects lack their own EINs, instead using Arabella’s core nonprofits as fiscal sponsors.
•Staff often employed by Arabella Advisors (for-profit), just as Eisner staff run affiliated nonprofits.
•Creates the appearance of diverse grassroots advocacy, while control is centralized.
Research on the Story and Prevalence of Child Removal into Foster Care
The story shared— involving parental drug and alcohol addiction, infidelity leading to family separation, physical and emotional abuse, exposure to inappropriate adult behaviors, child abandonment, runaway at age 11, homelessness at 13, involvement in gangs for survival, sexual assault, and lifelong mental health impacts like unresolved trauma and estrangement from siblings— aligns with many documented experiences of children from dysfunctional or “broken” homes in the United States. Such narratives are unfortunately common, often stemming from intergenerational cycles of poverty, substance abuse, neglect, and domestic instability. Research indicates that these factors frequently result in children being removed from their homes and placed into foster care or, in cases where the system fails to intervene early, leading to homelessness or street involvement.
According to national data, neglect is the leading cause of child removal, accounting for about 63% of foster care placements in recent years, while parental drug abuse contributes to around 32-36% of cases. Overall, substance abuse (including drugs and alcohol) is a factor in up to 39% of removals. Between 2000 and 2023, approximately 5.9 million children entered foster care in total, with over 1.6 million entries explicitly because of parental drug abuse; the proportion rose from 15% in 2000 to a peak of 36-39% around 2017-2021, before slightly declining to 32% by 2023. In 2023, 175,283 children entered foster care, with neglect at 63% and parental substance abuse at 32% as primary reasons. Children under age 5 are particularly vulnerable, comprising the fastest-growing group in foster care, often due to parental addiction.
Stories like this are not outliers; they reflect systemic patterns. For instance, nearly 60% of youth identified as homeless have histories of foster care, abuse, or domestic violence. Media and personal accounts often highlight abuse in broken homes leading to foster placement or runaway scenarios, with some children experiencing further trauma in foster care itself. The child welfare system handles millions of reports annually, and nationally, poverty-related neglect (not always intentional abuse) drives most removals—up to 80% in some areas. Long-term effects mirror the described lifelong pain: increased risks of mental health issues, substance abuse, incarceration, and unstable relationships for those from such backgrounds.
The Problem: Child Removal from Broken Homes into Foster Systems
The core issue is that broken homes—characterized by substance abuse, neglect, physical/sexual abuse, and family dissolution—frequently lead to child removal as a protective measure, but the foster care system itself is often inadequate or harmful. In 2023, 175,283 children entered foster care due to maltreatment. While removal aims to prevent further harm, it can exacerbate trauma through instability, sibling separation, and potential abuse in foster placements. Critics describe the U.S. foster system as “broken,” with too many children entering unnecessarily (e.g., due to poverty mislabeled as neglect) and insufficient support for biological families. This results in poor outcomes: foster youth are more likely to face homelessness, teen pregnancy, juvenile justice involvement, and long-term emotional scars compared to peers who remain in supported homes. Additionally, the system disproportionately affects low-income and minority families, perpetuating cycles of separation without addressing root causes like addiction or economic hardship.
Imagine this:
A 14-year-old boy laughs while typing on his computer.
But hidden in those messages? A predator grooming him. This is the heartbreaking reality in our video “If We Don’t, Who Will” Watch and share to save lives. @P_MilkCarton
Your child is being groomed when you’re not paying attention. Mom walks by without a glance, Dad’s in the garage with friends. Distractions are everywhere, but so are the dangers. Online predators thrive on our unawareness.
He runs away, thinking he’s meeting a friend his age. But it’s a trap—an older man waiting. He senses danger, tries to flee, but a car pulls up… and he’s gone. Kidnapped into the nightmare of trafficking.
Back home, parents are comfy on the couch, texting and laughing. They feel safe. But their son is now chained, abused, sexually assaulted, forced into slave labor and sex work. Years pass, the pain never stops. They search endlessly, guilt-ridden, wondering if he’s alive.
Life goes on around them—kids swinging in parks. But those swings empty as more children vanish. Police are overwhelmed, doing what they can. Then, a young man arrested for trafficking and drugs… it’s their son, now a perpetrator himself. The cycle continues.
@Amerifuture @ShepherdsWatchF @GUARDATOfficial
Break the cycle! Our video ends with shocking stats: Every year, 4.2 million youth (ages 13-25) experience homelessness in the US, many as runaways vulnerable to traffickers. Nearly 1 in 3 runaway youth engage in survival sex.
Online grooming is exploding: In 2024, reports of online enticement to the NCMEC CyberTipline reached 546,000, a 192% increase from 2023. According to recent research, 15.6% of US youth experience online child sexual abuse. Globally, more than 300 million children worldwide are victims of some type of online sexual exploitation and abuse annually. In the US, child sex trafficking affects thousands of children, with NCMEC receiving over 27,800 reports in 2024, and approximately 43% of victims knowing their trafficker prior to becoming a victim, often including family members or friends.