Dark-money-funded leftist NGOs were at it again this weekend, attempting to stage a color-revolution-style regime change in Washington, D.C., right outside the White House. But as with every operation this year, dating back to “Tesla Takedown,” the only people these far-left groups, funded by rogue billionaires and some with taxpayer funds, managed to summon were the usual unhinged white baby-boomer liberal, serial protesters at best, with nothing else better to do.
Self-proclaimed investor and “CIA/NSA contractor/whistleblower” Tony Seruga wrote on X about who potentially attended the D.C. protest march on Saturday. Using device data collected from the area, Seruga found it was largely the same crowd, leftist NGO foot soldiers – or repeat protesters from previous marches…
Here’s a breakdown of Seruga’s data:
Device Analysis
- 318 mobile devices present (law enforcement, media, and demonstrators).
- 92% of devices had been at 5+ past D.C. protests.
- 67 devices tied to federal government employees, with access to secured federal buildings (DoD, VA, DHS, DOJ, FBI, Treasury).
- 9 devices accessed the White House Northwest Gate multiple times in the prior 30 days.
Demographics: Mostly local DMV residents; 86.7% from homes valued >$850,000, 34% from homes valued >$2.5 million.
Protest Details
- Branded as “Free DC” and “Fight the Trump Takeover”.
- Targeted Trump’s federalization of D.C. policing and National Guard deployments from GOP states.
- Route: Dupont Circle → White House (~1.5 miles). Chants/signs: “Trump Must Go”, “Hands Off DC”.
- Part of broader anti-Trump demonstrations nationwide.
Organizers & Funding
- Led by Community Change and Community Change Action under the “Free DC” initiative.
- Backed by $20M+ from progressive dark-money networks: Soros’ Open Society Foundations Arabella Advisors network Tides Foundation
Paid Participation
- Reports of 400% surge in demand for paid protesters in D.C. after Trump’s announcements.
- Crowds on Demand confirmed anti-Trump events drove most inquiries.
- Soros allegedly spent $20M on crowd-rental services for demonstrations.