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7/16/2025, 5:00:59 PM
>>510540820
>>510541082
>Thursday's upcoming color revolution operation, titled "Good Trouble Lives On," is a front group supported by dozens of leftist nonprofits, some of which have participated in previous protests (e.g., "No Kings"). The new development is that the CEO of a protest-for-hire company publicly admitted that a group offered $20 million to recruit fake protesters and amplify an artificial narrative.
>Good Trouble Lives On's partners...
(Previous post's picrel)
>Attempting another nationwide color revolution operation....
>Thursday's Good Trouble Lives On's mobilization focuses on civil rights, not issues like Tesla or DOGE or Trump—topics addressed by earlier calls to action.
>Jason Curtis Anderson from One City Rising comments on this latest development:
>Most people who defend the right to protest are really defending the right to free speech, which is important. The thing they don't understand is that it's become a permanent protest industry, and there's a lot of components about it that should alarm all Americans, but most do not understand what is going on.
>Someone creating a national 'crowds on demand' business and someone from the NGO world offering them $20M shows that omni-cause advocacy is a national business, and it actually pays quite well. Something that the American people have failed to grasp, even as protests become permanent, is that the tax-deductible 501c3 nonprofit world is the unregulated wild west of this behavior. It's the only sector where someone can get paid to sow chaos and protest every day, not have any tangible deliverables or metrics that prove they are in-fact working for the public good, and that there's a multi-billion dollar network of NGOs behind these entities to support them.
>>510541082
>Thursday's upcoming color revolution operation, titled "Good Trouble Lives On," is a front group supported by dozens of leftist nonprofits, some of which have participated in previous protests (e.g., "No Kings"). The new development is that the CEO of a protest-for-hire company publicly admitted that a group offered $20 million to recruit fake protesters and amplify an artificial narrative.
>Good Trouble Lives On's partners...
(Previous post's picrel)
>Attempting another nationwide color revolution operation....
>Thursday's Good Trouble Lives On's mobilization focuses on civil rights, not issues like Tesla or DOGE or Trump—topics addressed by earlier calls to action.
>Jason Curtis Anderson from One City Rising comments on this latest development:
>Most people who defend the right to protest are really defending the right to free speech, which is important. The thing they don't understand is that it's become a permanent protest industry, and there's a lot of components about it that should alarm all Americans, but most do not understand what is going on.
>Someone creating a national 'crowds on demand' business and someone from the NGO world offering them $20M shows that omni-cause advocacy is a national business, and it actually pays quite well. Something that the American people have failed to grasp, even as protests become permanent, is that the tax-deductible 501c3 nonprofit world is the unregulated wild west of this behavior. It's the only sector where someone can get paid to sow chaos and protest every day, not have any tangible deliverables or metrics that prove they are in-fact working for the public good, and that there's a multi-billion dollar network of NGOs behind these entities to support them.
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