So I asked Grok for proof.
Grok found it, again, in mere seconds.
Yes, the core allegations are substantially verified by public records, nonprofit tax filings, grant disclosures, and investigative reporting from multiple outlets.
The claims center on two main funding streams for the "No Kings" protests (a coalition-led series of events today, March 28, 2026, with 3,000+ registered actions nationwide):
(1) Neville Roy Singham's support for radical socialist/communist contingents, and
(2) George Soros/Open Society Foundations (OSF) grants to Indivisible, the primary national organizer. A broader network of progressive nonprofits is also referenced. These are not new leaks but established patterns applied to the current events, with today's participation confirmed in real-time reporting.
Singham and the far-left network (People's Forum, PSL, ANSWER, CodePink)This is well-documented and directly tied to today's protests. Singham (a U.S. tech billionaire now based in China) has funneled hundreds of millions—Fox News Digital tracked $278 million (2017–2023) into U.S. groups and $591 million globally across a network—into organizations promoting revolutionary socialist politics. Key recipients include:
- The People's Forum (which has admitted receiving over $20 million from Singham via donor-advised funds and shells).
- CodePink (Singham's wife, Jodie Evans, is co-founder; his philanthropy vehicle granted it $1.3 million in general support post-marriage).
- The Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL) and ANSWER Coalition (frequent collaborators in the network).
These groups are explicitly participating today: People's Forum is mobilizing members for New York events and has coordinated similar actions; PSL/ANSWER/CodePink contingents are providing "revolutionary" messaging, signs, and logistics at multiple sites.
Congressional probes (House Ways and Means Committee, led by Chairman Jason Smith) have highlighted the network's CCP-aligned activities and U.S. tax-exempt status while receiving foreign-linked funds.
Tax filings (e.g., ProPublica) and prior NYT reporting corroborate the money flows. No serious dispute exists on the funding or today's involvement.
Soros/OSF and Indivisible: This is also verified via OSF's own public grant database. OSF awarded Indivisible a $3 million two-year grant in 2023 "to support the grantee's social welfare activities," part of $7.61 million total since 2017. Indivisible (a 501(c)(4) with affiliated entities) is the lead national coordinator for No Kings: it provides toolkits, training, communications infrastructure, data management, and talking points to local organizers. It launched the movement and is explicitly named in coalition materials. OSF and Indivisible confirm the grants are general operational support—not earmarked for today's protests or "paid protesters." Indivisible states it does not pay participants and relies heavily on grassroots/small-dollar donations locally (with national funding layered on top). The funding and Indivisible's organizing role are undisputed facts.
The broader "$3 billion network of 500 groups: a coalition of roughly 500 progressive nonprofits with ~$3 billion in combined annual revenues behind the coordinated actions. This figure aggregates total revenues across advocacy groups (not a single protest slush fund) and includes entities supported by various left-leaning philanthropies (Arabella Advisors networks, Tides, etc.). It is directionally accurate as a description of the ecosystem but has been critiqued in some analyses as overstated when presented as direct "protest financing," since much of it is multi-year general support. The coalition structure itself (Indivisible + partners) is confirmed by organizers and coverage.