The "No Kings" rallies were partially funded by Neville Roy Singham, an American tech tycoon and avowed communist living in Shanghai, according to a Fox Digital News investigation.
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Singham is linked to a network of radical socialist and communist organizations that contributed to the protests, which took place on March 28, 2026, across the U.S. and abroad.
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Key groups tied to Singham’s funding
include:
Party for Socialism and Liberation
People’s Forum in New York
ANSWER Coalition
CodePink, co-founded by Singham’s wife, Jodie Evans
Freedom Road Socialist Organization
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These groups, part of what has been described as the "Singham network", coordinated under the broader "No Kings" banner, with some promoting a message of "revolution" and using Maoist organizing strategies.
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The overall protest effort involved around 500 organizations with an estimated $3 billion in combined annual revenue, with George Soros-linked Indivisible serving as the lead coordinator for the flagship rally in St. Paul, Minnesota.
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See. 500 groups with $3B in revenues are behind the NoKings protests and communist call for 'revo!ution'
We can see what Cardinal Pizzaballa intended very clearly. When one accepts certain risks, one cannot complain about the consequences of one's risk-taking. This was a cynical attempt to place Israel in a no win situation but all religious institutions were closed... 1)
including the Western Wall & al-Aqsa Mosque for their parishioners safety. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre has no bomb shelter for its faithful. Now, we see who the Pope supports. Notice the Cardinal wears a terrorist keffiyah. This Pope was selected to usher in Chrislam. 2)
If the Pope wants to protect his flock, he can send the funds to build a bomb shelter. There's no way you can reach the Holy Sepulchre with ambulances or even helicopters in case of an attack.
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@TRobinsonNewEra We all know the real reason they are doing this. It is a clash of cultures. Those who love man's best friend and those who see them as unclean and an anathema and are seeking to change England's strong affection for these animals.
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@TRobinsonNewEra England's affection for dogs runs deep and traces back centuries, forming a cherished and longstanding element of national identity and everyday life. The British, particularly the English often describe themselves as a "nation of dog lovers," with...
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@TRobinsonNewEra dogs viewed not merely as pets but as family members, loyal companions, and even emotional outlets in a culture stereotyped for reserve.
Britain pioneered modern dog culture: the first formal dog shows emerged in the mid-19th century,
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Roger Froikin @rlefraim wrote, "Some Pesach Thoughts
What Is Slavery? -
Pesach is the anniversary of the liberation of the Jewish nation from slavery in Egypt. But what is slavery?
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We picture that today as people being bought and sold as property, which is what Muslims have done for ages, and Europeans did to take people to the New World to work for them.
Today we picture what happened to African slaves before slavery was abolished in the Americas.
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We tend to forget that some of the first slave owners in the Americas were Black and held White slaves or indentured servants. A lot of the accurate history has been ignored and lost.
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Roger Froikin @rlefraim wrote, "Language, Judaism, Torah
The importance of understanding in Hebrew
I am going to state this as clearly as possible.
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Trying to understand Torah, trying to interpret Torah, through the lens of any other language, through translations, and without an understanding of history and how history impacted the Jewish people throughout time, is categorically a mistake.
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Translations can be an aid. Reading the interpretations of others, if one considers when they wrote and the conditions under which they lived, can be an aid, but only Torah in the original Hebrew language, with an understanding of how Hebrew works and its metaphoric richness,
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