Shanghai Tycoon With Communist Ties Linked To Orchestrated Anti-ICE Riots

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In a rare display of investigative journalism, The New York Times in August 2023 unveiled the true nature of the so-called anti-war group Code Pink, revealing it as a front for Communist China.

The report, penned by Kristinn Taylor, shed light on the group's deep ties with the Democratic Party and its alignment with communist ideologies.

Jodie Evans, a co-founder of Code Pink, has a long-standing association with the Democratic Party. She served as the campaign manager for former California Governor Jerry Brown's 1992 presidential campaign and was a prominent figure in the 2008 presidential campaign, hosting Obama fundraisers in Hollywood.

Evans, 68, married Neville Roy Singham, 69, in 2017, a man who has been identified as a significant player in the propagation of Chinese propaganda.

Susan 'Medea' Benjamin, another co-founder of Code Pink, was reported by Jordan Conradson of The Gateway Pundit to have protested against President Trump at his arraignment in Washington, D.C. This is despite the fact that Trump was the only U.S. president not to initiate any new wars during his term. The group's opposition to Trump, even during his second term, raises questions about its true nature. According to The Gateway Pundit, Code Pink is not an "anti-war" group but rather a front for communist ideologies.

As reported by The New York Times, No Cold War, a group that appears to be a collective of American and British activists, is in fact part of a well-funded influence campaign that defends China and promotes its propaganda.

The central figure in this campaign is Neville Roy Singham, an American millionaire known for supporting far-left causes. Singham's involvement with the Chinese government's media machine and his funding of its global propaganda have been concealed behind a complex network of nonprofit groups and shell companies.

The Times investigation traced hundreds of millions of dollars to groups linked to Singham that blend progressive advocacy with Chinese government talking points. Among these groups is Code Pink, which has shifted its stance over time. Once critical of China's human rights record, Code Pink now defends China's internment of the predominantly Muslim Uyghurs, an act that human rights experts have labeled a crime against humanity.

Singham's influence extends beyond Code Pink. His funding, channeled through American nonprofits, has reached at least $275 million in donations. In 2017, Singham married Jodie Evans, a former Democratic political adviser and co-founder of Code Pink. The wedding was attended by prominent figures in progressive circles, including Amy Goodman, host of "Democracy Now!"; Ben Cohen, co-founder of Ben & Jerry's ice cream; and V, the playwright formerly known as Eve Ensler, who wrote "The Vagina Monologues."

Since 2017, about a quarter of Code Pink's donations, amounting to more than $1.4 million, have come from two groups linked to Singham. When asked in a recent YouTube video chat if she had anything negative to say about China, Evans responded, "I can't, for the life of me, think of anything."

Singham's office in Shanghai's upscale Times Square is shared with a Chinese media company called Maku Group, which aims to "tell China's story well," a phrase often used to describe foreign propaganda. Maku produces text, audio, and videos for "global networks of popular media and progressive think tanks."

The Daily Beast also published a report in May on Singham, but it glossed over his ties to Code Pink. The report outlined how Singham sold his multibillion-dollar software company Thoughtworks five years prior and has since funneled money into a labyrinth of nonprofit organizations.

Antonio Graceffo of The Gateway Pundit reported that Singham is the financier behind the communist party network fueling anti-ICE protests across the US. The protests, far from being spontaneous uprisings, are part of a sophisticated network of Chinese Communist Party-linked funding that threatens American sovereignty.

Singham, an American tech billionaire based in Shanghai, has built an intricate dark money network that allows him to channel funds through a series of nonprofits with virtually no trace. Through this network, Singham has funneled at least $275 million to groups worldwide that blend progressive advocacy with Chinese government talking points.

The People's Forum, founded by Claudia De La Cruz, the 2024 presidential candidate for the Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL), is a key node in this network. Several other PSL figures hold leadership positions at Breakthrough BT Media Inc., another Singham-funded entity.

The Party for Socialism and Liberation, a Marxist group advocating for the complete dismantling of American capitalism, is a key recipient of Singham's funding network. The group helped organize the L.A. riots, printing the signage, providing trained spokespeople, and coordinating similar riots in San Antonio, Oakland, and beyond.

The pattern is clear: Chinese money is flowing to anti-American radicals who then unleash chaos on American streets. It is evident that Code Pink is not an anti-war group but an anti-US group.

It is regrettable that certain outlets continue to give these communists a platform. The funding for the riots leads back to China, revealing a disturbing reality about the forces undermining American sovereignty.