U.N. Agenda 21 Pennsylvania Tea Party Patriot Alert News Robert
Casey Jr Pa Senator S.O.B. Supporter of Barack Hussein Obama George Soros
Backed Evil Plan for Your Children in Pennsylvania Sustainable Terror
Pennsylvania One World Order Open Society Foundations Liberal Liberty Killers
plan to Murder U.S. Constitution Robert P Bob Casey Jr Pa Congress U.S. Senator
Communism Socialism Marxism Left Wink Ivy League Harvard Columbia Yale SEIU
AFL-CIO TEAMSTERS Although the U.N.’s George Soros-backed plan for
“Sustainable Development” (also known as “Agenda 21”) seems to have gone
largely unnoticed by many Americans, the shadowy, backdoor attack on personal
property rights didn’t slip past the people of Alabama.
Say the name George Soros and liberals see dollar signs
–literally. The world’s 22nd richest
man, according to Forbes, is now worth $20 billion. But Soros isn’t just
noteworthy for the money he has – he’s notable for the money he has given away.
Since launching his Open Society Foundations in 1984, Soros has donated more
than $8 billion to charities around the world.
But instead of gaining a mighty reputation for his
philanthropy, or his investment prowess, Soros is reviled abroad and criticized
here in his adopted country. Most everywhere Soros, his foundations or his
investing have gone, trouble has followed. He’s helped foment revolutions,
undermined national currencies and funded radicals around the world. Soros has
been convicted of insider dealing in France and fined $3 million, fined another
$2 million in his native Hungary. His“foundations have been accused of
shielding spies and breaking currency laws”and his investing strategy has been
targeted for harming several national currencies.
Even his support for higher education raises huge red
flags. Soros has contributed more than $400 million to colleges and
universities, including money to most prominent institutions in the United
States. He also helped establish Central European University which, in turn,
uses its resources to promote his personal goal of an “open society.”
Here in the United States, Soros money provides the
foundation for liberal organizations promoting everything from gay marriage and
drug legalization to anti-death penalty strategies. While his charitable giving
goes to liberal organizations with close ties to the Democratic Party, his
political giving goes almost entirely to Democrats.
That’s not the story the broadcast networks have been
telling about Soros for the past five years. There were 29 mentions of Soros
during that time but only one gave any hint at trouble, and that was merely to
mention he was “still known as the man who broke the Bank of England.” But ABC
followed it up with: “That was all legal.” Only a sex scandal with a
28-year-old Brazilian actress gave Soros any negative publicity at all.
Soros Indoctrinates Students Around the World
Left-wing donor George Soros spent more than $400 million
world-wide to indoctrinate students and teach them to promote liberal, and in
some cases extremist, causes. He has even funded his own university that
promotes his own unique philosophy of open society. His reach and influence far
surpasses that of the Koch brothers, who have been vilified by the left and the
media for their grants to universities.
While the left shrivels at the thought of the Koch
brother’s donations to universities, their beloved Soros gave more than 50
times as much. Central European University and Bard College received the most
from Soros. One professor at CEU praised the Occupy movement combining
environmentalism, feminism, the labor movement, and social justice. Grants to
Bard College for “community service and social action” included a Palestinian
youth group and an initiative to educate prisoners across the country. To top
it off, all of the Ivy League universities, along with a variety of state
schools, private institutions, and even religiously-affiliated institutions,
were also funded by Soros.
Soros funded programs and classes at universities around
the world promote his radical ideology. Soros’s Open Society Foundations
granted $407,790,344 in gifts and commitments to higher education since the
year 2000. The Koch brothers were vilified by the American political left for
donating almost $7 million to universities while their beloved Soros gave more
than 50 times that amount to the same type of groups. Alternet, funded by Soros
complained about a “shady deal” that helped the Kochs fund Florida State
University. Colorlines, also funded by Soros, said of the same donation: “FSU
Trades Academic Freedom for Billionaire Charles Koch’s Money.”
Both Central European University and Bard College
received vastly more money from Soros than every penny the Kochs donated to
higher education. CEU has received more than a quarter of a billion dollars
from the Soros foundations. And Bard has gotten $76 million from them.
Together, CEU and Bard received roughly 75 percent of
Soros’s total contributions. Central European University was founded and
endowed by Soros, providing an outlet for his own personal lecture series that
was turned into a book for students to purchase. His ex-wife’s pet project,
Bard Collect, received a new department for her to lead and supports
Palestinian social programs.
Central European University and Bard College received
specific donations for some of the most liberal courses and programs in the
world. One course at CEU incorporated lessons of the Occupy movement and the
teacher proudly described how the movement combined feminism, environmentalism,
social justice, and the labor movement all under one roof. Programs at Bard
include a Palestinian youth group, an initiative to educate prisoners across
the country, and various other groups for “community service and social
action.”
Ivy League schools to include Harvard, Columbia, and Yale
were also well funded through the Soros foundations. A Harvard documentary on
the War on Terror received Soros-funds along with various left-wing projects at
other universities to include judicial and journalism initiatives. Programs
that teach and promote Soros’s ideology are heavily funded across the board.
Soros Gave More than 50 Times as much as Koch Brothers to
Universities, Liberals Still Scream Foul
The left shrivels at the thought of the Koch brothers
donating to universities even though their beloved Soros gave more than 50
times as much. With more than $400 million given and pledged to higher
education around the worlds, the American political left is still terrified
that they aren’t indoctrinating enough.
ThinkProgress detailed the Koch contributions to higher
education on May 11 2011, with Koch brothers’ contributions totaling nearly $7
million. That’s not even as much as the Center for American Progress, which
operates ThinkProgress, has received from Soros.
ThinkProgress went on to criticize the Kochs, even saying
that Charles Koch went on a “spending spree” to “buy academic freedom.” Soros,
on the other hand, has spent more than $400 million on universities around the
world. He’s not only managed to buy academic freedom, but win the hearts and
minds of students around the world and train them to become left-wing
activists.
David and Charles Koch are the libertarian businessmen in
charge of Koch Industries. They have donated to libertarian and conservative
groups along with medical research, the arts, and various other causes. Even
with billions of dollars in funding from Soros, the left feels the need to
criticize many of the Kochs much smaller endeavors.
Even major media organizations have gone after the Kochs
for their contributions. The Kochs were described as everything from “the
ubiquitous Koch brothers: the Zeligs of questionable funding” by The New York
Times to the “implacable ideological foes of organized labor” by the Los
Angeles Times.
Soros’s Center for American Progress, which received $7.3
million from his foundations, posted a report on their Think Progress blog
titled“Koch Fueling Far Right Academic Centers at
Universities across the Country ” In
the article, the Koch-hating leftist Lee Fang lists universities that received
money from the Kochs to include George Mason University, Utah State, and Brown.
Totaling nearly $7 million, grants as small as $100,000 were criticized. A
donation of $1.5 million to Florida State University supposedly gave the Kochs
“a free hand in selecting professors and approving publications.”
While Charles Koch is referred to as “a dominant player
when it comes to meddling with academic integrity,” Soros’s name appears
nowhere in the article. Giving 50 times the amount cited by the Center for
American Progress is ignored by liberal bloggers that are funded by Soros.
AlterNet, the unhinged liberal blog, reposted Fang’s
report. They are part of the “Echo-Chamber” of liberal blogs created by the
Media Consortium, which received $425,000. An additional $495,000 went to the Independent Media Institute, which is the
parent-group of Alternet. They went on to describe the Kochs as “megalomaniacal
mega-billionaires” and even were scandalized by Charles Koch,
claiming that he went on “shopping spree for an invaluable bauble that most of
us didn’t even know was for sale: academic freedom.”
Soros-Founded Central European University Rakes in the
Cash
2011 marked the 20th anniversary
of the Soros-founded Central European University. Since its inception, the Open
Society Foundations have given more than $250 million in gifts and commitments
to this European venture. The anniversary
website lays out the mission since CEU’s founding in 1991, “The
idea was that a multinational university could be a place to study the
principles of open society.”
CEU is the prime example of liberal extremism funded at
the university level. One professor even praised the Occupy movement combining
environmentalism, feminism, the labor movement, and social justice. Soros has
used CEU for everything from promoting his books to hosting an economic
conference group (that he of course funds) out to change the global economy.
The Soros Lectures is one of Soros’s books, which was created from the lectures
he gave at CEU. The Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) hosted their
2011 conference at the university.
Praise for the extreme views of the Occupy movement came
from one program director.
Tamara Steger, the Doctoral Program Director for the
Environmental Sciences and Policy, visited Zuccotti Park herself to learn about
the movement. A video on the CEU YouTube channel showed Steger in front of a
class with a slide behind her that said “How to OCCUPY peoples’ heads with your
message…” Earlier in the video, she praised the Occupy movement for combining
the environmental, social justice, feminist, and labor movements to talk about
issues that “really mattered.”
CEU is dedicated to promoting Soros’s idea of an open
society and “that professors and students could be recruited internationally to
build a new and unique institution, one that would train future generations of
scholars, professionals, politicians and civil society leaders to contribute to
building open societies and democracies throughout the region and beyond.”
One of the schools “intellectual themes” for 2011
was“social responsibility of academia.” This indoctrination was described as “a
university’s obligations to society and their discipline-specific
manifestations.” Events were hosted throughout the year, with the goal of Soros’s open
society at the forefront. Lectures included one on feminist voice through the
Department of Gender Studies and another on global energy emissions to include
low carbon output.
CEU hosted a series of five lectures by
George Soros that he later turned into a book creatively titled “The Soros Lectures At the
central European University.” The
lectures and book lay out Soros’s vision for an open society and his view on
economics and politics. The first two lectures laid out his theory of
reflexivity and financial markets. The third and fourth examined the concept of
open society and the potential for conflict with capitalism. Finally, he
concludes with a lecture on China’s rising role in the world.
The University also hosted a Institute for New Economic
Thinking (INET) Conference. INET received $50 million from Soros.
The event is bringing together "more
than 200 academic, business and government policy thought leaders' to repeat
the famed 1944 Bretton Woods gathering that helped create the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund. Soros wants a new 'multilateral system," or an
economic system where America isn't so dominant.
CEU even teamed up with Google in September of 2010 to
co-sponsor the Internet at Liberty conference which
addressed, “the ways in which dissidents and governments are using the
Internet; and urgent policy and legal issues of online communication such as
privacy and cybersecurity.” CEU’s President John Shattuck described the
universities mission as one to promote open societies around the world, “CEU is
committed to provide intellectual support for building and strengthening open
and democratic societies that respect human rights.”
Departments at the university work hard to promote the
Soros vision. László Pinté, Professor of
Environmental Sciences, is labeled a sustainability expert that
worked with the United Nations. He focused on sustainable development in order
to deal with environment problems such as climate change and biodiversity
conservation. The Department of Gender Studies description on CEU’s website
proudly states, “faculty consider the intersection of gender and sexuality,
especially as it relates to feminist theory, queer theory and gay rights activism.”
A seminar called “Promoting Integration Of
Migrants And Minorities Through Media” was co-hosted by the Center
for Environment and Security along with the Center for Independent Journalism-
which ironically received more than $50,000 from Soros. This program described
that the media “The media are in a position to play a crucial mediating role
between immigrant and host societies” and “enhance social cohesion.”
Soros’s entanglement with the university is blatantly
obvious when the Board of Trustees is examined. The Founder and Chairman of the
Board is none other than Soros. More than half of CEU’s 20 member board are
closely tied to the liberal financier. President of the Soros-funded Bard
College Leon Botstein is Chairman of the Board.
Other board members include president of the Open Society
Foundations Aryeh Neierand William Newton-Smith of the Open Society Foundation
in London. Soros’s son Jonathan Soros is yet another familiar name on CEU’s
board.
Other “less notable” connections to Soros on the Board
include those affiliated with other Soros-funded universities along with other
Soros-funded groups. Harvard’s Patricia Albejerg Graham and Benjamin W. Heineman,
Jr. sit on the board with Gerhard Casper of Stanford University. Other groups
funded by Soros are represented including Kemal Dervis of the liberal Brooking
Institute, which received nearly $250,000. Journalist Kati Marton serves on the
board as well. Organizations she has worked at during her career include the
Soros-funded Human Rights Watch- $109,239,311, and New America Foundation-
$3,831,875, National Public Radio- $1.1 million, International Rescue
Committee- $1,267,475, and the Committee to Protect Journalists- $828,766.
Soros’s Favorite U.S. School- Bard College
The “progressive” Bard College in New York is a favorite
of the Soros family. With more than $70 million in funding, Bard is the prime
example of what Soros aims to achieve with his university funding. He gave an
entire department for his now ex-wife Susan Weber to run after she was turned
down for the job she really wanted. Bard celebrates left-wing causes and
encourages students to go out and become activists for their own favorite
causes.
The grants to Bard College show exactly what type of
efforts Soros gives to in order to train student activists. Programs at Bard
include a Palestinian youth group, an initiative to educate prisoners across
the country, and various other groups for “community service and social
action.” The school received $76,792,265 in gifts and commitments from Soros
since 2000. From 2000-2010 they were granted more than $16 million with an
additional $60 million in funding added
to their endowment by Soros in 2011.
Soros was quoted in The New York Times, “as a general
rule I do not support higher education in the United States.” Soros continued
that the grant will “help Bard in its efforts to transform liberal education
and bolster critical thinking worldwide.” While this is inherently false seeing
as Soros gave more than $100 million to U.S. universities, it still highlight
the fact that the programs at Bard are well representative of his views.
Bard is also the home to a department created by Soros’s
now ex-wife for her to run. The Bard College Graduate Center for Studies in the
Decorative Arts, Design, and Culture was created by Susan Weber (formerly Susan
Weber Soros) after she was turned down for another job. As the New York Times described,
“Mrs. Soros was turned down for the job of director of graduate education at the
Cooper-Hewitt/Parsons School of Design. So with $20 million of her husband's
money, she started her own school.”
Imagine the hysterical fits from the liberal bloggers and
the main stream media if one of the Koch brother’s wives did such a thing!
Susan Weber, however, was hailed as savvy woman on a mission. The New York
Times even compared her in the same article to “a long tradition of wealthy
women who have been instrumental in founding cultural institutions” such as
Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney’s funding of the Whitney Museum and Abby Alrdrich
Rockefeller and her contribution to the Museum of Modern Art. The comparison of
a graduate program to two groundbreaking museums, however noteworthy, is a bit
of an exaggeration.
Described as a “progressive college” by one of their own,
Bard’s promotion of left-wing causes surely helped gain additional funds from
Soros. 150 years of Bard College is celebrated in the video “Education for the Common Good.”This eleven-minute
video describes how Bard is different from other universities. David E. Schwab
II, Chair Emeritus of the Board of Trustee described the institution as a
“progressive college” and many of Soros’s pet projects are detailed.
Bard’s Institute for International Liberal Education
helped found and is partnered with various institutions. Joint degree programs
are offered in South Africa, Kyrgystan, Hungary, Russia, and a Palestinian
school in Jerusalem. In Russia, they helped found The University of St.
Petersburg. Soros directly donated an additional $5,928,599 to the Fund for the
European University and St. Petersburg from his Open Society Foundations. In
Hungary, they work with the Soros-founded Central European University which
received more than $50 million from his foundations.
The Institute is also partnered with Al-Quds University in
Jerusalem which provides higher education for Palestinians. Al-Quds is the only
Arab university in Jerusalem with close to 12,000 students. They offer a U.S.
and Palestinian degree at the Bachelor and Master’s levels to “educate future
leaders and foster economic development.” They focus on “educating the whole
person: socially, intellectually, and spiritually.” In the about section, Bard
is described as a college that “sought to introduce liberal education in‘countries
in transition,’” following the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Soros is able to fund student activists through the
Trustee Leader-Scholar (TLS). This program enables students to form groups for
“Community Service and Social Action.”These
programs provide students the ability to not just create your average student
group, but ones that promote Soros’s liberal mission in the U.S. and globally.
The Bard Palestinian Youth Initiative, as described by co-founder Rosana Zarza described, is
essentially a global non-profit, “We’re basically running an NGO. We’re doing
huge things. We’re impacting the world. Going to Palestine and doing all of
these things. It’s huge.” Their about us section states that
they want “civil engagement, cultural exchange, and education are the
fundamental means to building a viable and sustainable Palestinian state.” Below
they describe the TLS as a program that “encourages and supports students to do
challenging, even brazen acts of world change.”
Another program started by a former student focuses on
another issue that Soros has worked on for the past decade. The Bard Prison Initiative, which received $600,000 in
individual grants from Soros’s Open Society Foundations, is a degree program
held in five New York correctional facilities. They provide degree programs for
incarcerated men and women and created the Consortium for the Liberal Arts in
Prison to promote similar programs around the country.
Other academic programs prop up issues that are important
to Soros himself. The Center for Environmental Policy, as described by Director Eban
Goodstein, helps “facilitate national conversations about global
warming solutions, clean energy solutions to global warming.” They host a
National Climate Seminar via phone twice a month to bring together scientists,
filmmakers, policy analysts, and anyone interested in “solving this truly
civilization challenge.”
University Funding-Everything from the Ivy League to
State Schools and Religious Universities
Soros gives money to a variety of other schools
specifically to promote his left-wing causes. In addition to heavily funding
Central European University and Bard College, Soros funded programs and classes
at universities around the world promote his radical ideology. Soros’s Open
Society Foundations granted more than $400 million in gifts and commitments to
higher education since the year 2000.
All of the Ivy League universities, along with a variety
of state schools, private institutions, and even religiously-affiliated
institutions are funded by Soros. These grants went a documentary on the War on
Terror from Harvard to studying race and ethnicity at Ohio State University.
Every one of the Ivy League colleges and universities
received funding from Soros. More than $15 million was granted since 2000 to
promote specific programs that line up with the Soros ideology. Columbia and
Harvard were the real winners, receiving more than $8 million and more than $5
million respectively. Dartmouth bottomed out with a mere $3,000 with Princeton
following at $36,000. All of the other institutions received over $200,000.
Nineteen schools received more than $1 million from
Soros. Central European University and Bard College led the pack followed by
Columbia, the European University at St. Petersburg, and Indiana University.
Money from Soros goes to everything from general
operating funds to specific pet projects that influence the local community and
the world. Whether it’s a top ranked university or a religiously-affiliated
one, Soros has managed to find a left-wing cause to back with the help of his
foundations.
Harvard received $60,000 in 2008 to “develop outreach
program” for the film Secrecy. This 85 minute documentary on the
War on Terror, “with homeland security and the war on terror
becoming increasingly important issues, the U.S. government has grown more and
more secretive, allegedly to protect the country and save lives. But is this
culture of secrets at odds with democracy?” The documentary was also shown at
the Sundance Film Festival, which received $5,742,000 from Soros, and at the
Tribeca Film Festival, which got $85,000 form the Open Society Foundations.
Georgetown received $1,775,055 specifically allocated for
the Justice at Stake campaign,
whose mission it is to “keep state and federal courts fair and impartial.”Under
the issues overview on their website they have three sections: federal court
issues, state court issues, and diversity. They diversity section
states,“People of color, women, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered
persons, and persons with disabilities are underrepresented among state and
federal judges.”It goes on to say that this can lead to bias and a more diverse
bench is needed.
Other notable grants include $ 5 million to Indiana
University to establish an “endowment for benefit of American
University-Central Asia” in 2005. The American University of Central Asia
provides U.S. accredited degrees through the Soros-funded Bard College. Ohio
State University received more than $100,000 for their Kirwan Institute for the
study of race and ethnicity while New York University received grants to
complete a study on counterterrorism policing in Muslim communities.
Left-Wing Financier Throws Spends Millions on 2012
Election
When you like a product, you give it your stamp of
approval– whether it’s the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval or the USDA
imprint on food. But if you love a product, then you pony up the cash. George
Soros knows this as much as anyone. Soros, the moneybags of the left, has spent
$36 million in the last several years funding politicians and the left’s
political machine. He also gave $550 million to liberal
causes in 2000-2009.
There’s no product the Soros family likes better than
Obama. The Democratic president has received more money from Soros and his kin
than any other political candidate in the last 11 years – $16,000 and counting.
They gave an additional $250,000 to the inauguration fund, with five members of
the family each giving the maximum contribution of $50,000.
Given limits on donations, that’s an impressive amount of
support. Obama leads a list of the most doctrinaire liberals running for
office– all funded by Soros and his family. Those include former comic-turned
Sen. Al Franken, lefty Calif. Sen. Barbara Boxer and new “progressive” darling
and Massachusetts Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren.
Soros has propped up liberal politicians for years in the
United States, with more than $4 million in direct funding from him and his
family. Well known for funneling millions of dollars to liberal groups in their
attempt to destroy President George W. Bush in 2004, Soros has continued to
give money to promote causes and politicians on the left.
This campaign season, he’s already donated $100,000 to
the Majority PAC and another $75,000 to the House Majority PAC. Both of those
are designed to put Democrats in office and keep them there. While Soros initially stayed out of the
2011 Super PAC race by not
donating to the pro-Obama Priorities USA, he later came out saying that he was undecided on if he would
contribute to or create his own Super PAC.
Ironically, Soros has claimed he tried to stay out of
domestic political turmoil, his political donations show otherwise. Soros
claimed he tried to remain above internal politics in his opening essay to
Chuck Sudetic’s book “The Philanthropy of George Soros.” Soros wrote that he
learned,“to keep a greater distance from the internal politics of the countries
where I have foundations.” Normal people would say they’d stay out. Soros just
wanted to give the appearance of distance.
But he hasn’t stayed out of U.S. politics at all. Through
an extensive network of nonprofits, media properties and activist
organizations, Soros has become increasingly influential in American elections.
His hold over the American political left is especially strong. But just trying
to follow the Soros money trail almost requires your own personal accountant.
To recap:
- He and his
family gave more than $36 million to politicians and political groups
through the past two decades.
- Most of that
$36 million came in Soros’s epic battle to defeat President George W. Bush
in 2004. Soros alone spent more than $32 million of that total to fund the
anti-Bush campaign with liberal grassroots groups MoveOn.org, Joint
Victory Campaign 2004, and America Coming Together among the top
recipients.
- This is only
a hint at Soros’s real political funding. He’s given more than $550
million to fund the liberal infrastructure in the United States –
pro-abortion, pro-euthanasia, pro-gay marriage, pro-drug legalization,
pro-union and pro-government-funded media as well as anti-faith,
anti-death penalty and as anti-conservative as they come.
To put that in perspective, he vastly outspent the
libertarian Koch Brothers in individual political donations 8 to 1. Promoting
left-wing ideology to include everything from electing judges to immigration
reform, Soros has exerted his power over the nation’s liberal political elite.
The Kochs have been labeled as everything from “Tea Party
puppeteers” by New York Times columnists Charles M. Blow to industrialists
that“help keep the Tea Party movement well-caffeinated,” and vilified for their
extensive giving to conservatives. But Soros has fondly been described as a
philanthropist. The media fail to note that Soros has outspent the Kochs in
individual-funded political activity.
An analysis by the Center for Responsive
Politics’s Opensecrets.org compared contributions by the Koch brothers and
George Soros. This review from Sept. 21, 2010 showed Soros lavished
more than $34 million on 527s, candidates, and committees. This compared with a
mere $4 million from the Koch brothers. The Kochs do surpass Soros in funding
to candidates, parties, and committees, but the difference is a little more
than $800,000. Opensecrets.org is part of the Soros-funded Center for
Responsive Politics. They received $500,000 in grants from the Open Society
Foundation since 2000.
All this funding is a key part of the Soros empire with
more than $8 billion donated through his Open Society Foundations – and it’s
about to help impact another election.
But there’s been lots of negatives in Soros’s past as
he’s spread his influence around the world. Soros wears criticism like a badge
of honor. “I have now come under attack in several countries: in Hungary from
Hungarian nationalists; in Romania from the Vatra Romanesca; in Slovakia from
the communist party newspaper Pravda; in the Soviet Union by the organ of the
hard-liners Sovietskaia Russiya,” he claimed in “Underwriting Democracy.”
Financial Concerns Persist
Soros’s Open Society Fund was created in 1979 as a
charitable lead trust. Even its creator admitted his motives were “basically selfish”
and he wanted a “tax gimmick.” He did it as a “trust for his children” The
foundation charities themselves claim 1984 as their date of origin.
While Soros has been known worldwide for his investment
skills, he hasn’t always managed to stay clear of the authorities. He was found
guilty in France of an insider trading case about 20 years ago and has repeatedly
failed having it pulled from his record. According to The New York Times,
in September 2011, a French panel upheld his conviction because“he had bought
and sold shares of Société Générale in 1988 with the knowledge that the bank
might be a takeover target.” He was fined $3 million.
His fund ran into problems in Hungary, where Soros was
born and lived till his late teen years. At issue was how he handled an
investment into the “the country’s largest bank,” OTP. “His fund was fined $2
million by Hungarian regulators last week for having manipulated OTP’s stock
price,” wroteThe New York Times in
2009.
Even when he has steered clear of legal ramifications, he
had some questionable dealings. In 1999, New York Times economist (and now
Nobel Prize winner) Paul Krugman skewered Soros in a piece for Slate.com. The
story, “Don’t Blame It on Rio … or
Brasilia Either,” accused Arminio Fraga Neto of working with Soros
in his role as president of Brazil’s central bank. Fraga was upset, saying he
“did not have access to any privileged information” and Krugman posted a formal
apology saying “Fraga has behaved entirely properly.”
A very positive profile of Soros in The New Republic in
1994 still explained that his investing angered several nations. “The president
of the European Community and representatives of the French and Belgian
governments have accused him of orchestrating ‘an Anglo-Saxon plot’ to
undermine the French currency. The British government blames him for driving
sterling from the European Monetary System,” wrote Michael Lewis.
Soros’s currency moves have long been controversial. The
magazine Foreign Policy ran a cartoon of the billionaire in 2000 that shows
Soros torturing a James Bond character and saying “You saw what my awesome
destructive powers did to the British pound and Malaysian ringgit, 007 … Do you
think your puny governments can stop me?”reported The Washington Post.
The Soros Foreign Policy
Morton Abramowitz of the Carnegie Endowment for Peace
once said Soros becamethe “only
private citizen who had his own foreign policy.” That remains true, though it
often conflicts with that of the United States where he is a citizen. He has
even helped fund the nonprofit group called Independent Diplomat, with the
motto “a diplomatic service for those
who need it most.” It represented Kosovo, Somaliland and the
Polisario Front of Western Sahara, according to The New York Times. All three
were looking for recognition as independent states.
Soros devoted much of his early foundation effort to the
former Soviet Union and then its successor republics. The liberal New Republic
quoted Soros in 1994 saying, “Just write that the former Soviet Empire is now
called the Soros Empire.” Soros is“possibly, fantastically, the single most
powerful foreign influence in the whole of the former Soviet empire” they added.
He gave so much money that “Sorosovat” “became a
new verb in Russian, loosely meaning to apply for a grant.”
While Soros has even been nominated for Nobel Peace Prize,
many governments have viewed him as the enemy. In 1997, the Soros foundation was fined $3 million by the
nation of Belarus “for
what the government said were currency exchange violations,” according to the
May 2, 1997 New York Times. Belarus complained the organization had violated
its tax status “by supporting unsanctioned opposition rallies and taken other
actions that Belarus state television had earlier called “an intervention in
Belarus’s domestic affairs.” As a result, Soros closed the Belarus foundation
in November of that year, claiming the fines were “politically motivated.”
“In Albania, Kyrgystan, Serbia and Croatia, Mr. Soros’s
foundations have been accused of shielding spies and breaking currency laws.
His employees have been assault and threatened with imprisonment or financial
sanction for alleged crimes” wrote The New York Times that
same year.
Croatia went on to indict “three senior officials from a
local branch” of the Open Society Foundations for tax evasion, according to The
New York Times. It became“the first country in the former
East bloc to criminalize the work of George Soros’s Open Society
Institute.”
He ran into trouble in Thailand in 1997, as well. “The
financier George Soros canceled a speech in Bangkok in February when
protesters, including some respected local businesspeople, threatened to pelt
him with rotten eggs and fruit.” The protesters credited Soros for the“collapse
of the Thai baht,” their currency.
The prime minister of Malaysia had a much-publicized battle with Soros in
1997. Prime Minister Mahathir bin Mohamad said “that currency trading is
unnecessary, unproductive and immoral,” but his attacks also were laced with
anti-Semitism and easily discredited. Soros said Mahathir was “a menace to his
own country” and “a loose cannon,” according to the New York Times.
Soros was targeted by anti-globalization protesters at
the 2001 World Economic Forum in Brazil. An Argentinian activist called him a “hypocrite and a monster,”reported the BBC. The
next day he had to cancel a trip to Thailand “after
protestors threatened to pelt him with rotten eggs and excrement.”
In 2004, “two young men threw water and mayonnaise at him”
in Ukraine, accusing Soros of trying to push a “velvet revolution” just like
had happened in Georgia, reported the BBC. That same year, a critic of that
nation’s government said “Georgia does not exist right now, it is only another
U.S. state whose governor is George Soros,” wrote Al Jazeerah.
His efforts went so poorly in Russia that they came close
to open combat. In November, 2003 Al Jazeera reported,
“men in battle fatigues have raided the Moscow headquarters of billionaire
investor George Soros.” One of the Open Society executives said the attackers
had removed documents as a “climax to a long-running commercial dispute.”
Soros’s fund pulled out of Russia that year, after having lost a reported $2 billion.
Soros has enormous and global influence – typically
purchased by either his own hand or his Open Society Foundations. At one point,
he funded the entire government of the then-new nation of Georgia. “George
Soros, the New York financier, helped to establish a special anticorruption
fund to supplement the paltry salaries of most government employees, from the
president (who gets $1,500 a month) down to border guards ($500 a month), wrote The New York Times in
2004.
In 2008, he gave $50 million to Millennium Promise, run
by Soros buddy and economist Jeffrey Sachs. The goal of the project is to get
“the world’s 22 richest nations” to increase their foreign aid budgets. He gave another $27 million in
2011 to a related project.
Soros has spread billions around he world – even to
helpful projects. But his liberal views and aggressive undermining of
governments makes everything he does suspect.
Soros Donates $550 Million to Liberal Causes
It's easy to see George Soros's imprint on most major
American left-wing organizations. All you have to do is look at their financial
forms. George Soros aids hundreds of left-wing groups in America each year
under the auspices of his Open Society Foundations. In just 10 years, Soros has
given more than $550 million to liberal organizations in the United States.
And that's really just a beginning. That total represents
about 27 percent of the $2 billion given out by the American branches of his
Open Society Foundations from 2000 to 2009. (2010 forms are unavailable and
Open Society staff uncooperative.) Overall, he has given more than $8 billion
to those foundations since they first started in 1993, as an outgrowth of his
"open society" charity efforts dating back to 1979. His foundations
credit him as having given that money "to support human rights, freedom of
expression, and access to public health and education in 70 countries."
According to The New York Times, the foundation claims
"it is on track to give away about $860 million" this
year. If things stay true to form for Soros, much of that money will head
toward liberal groups in the United States. How that money is allocated takes
on a new dimension as Soros just named criminal justice expert Christopher Stone the
foundations' next president, starting in July.
Stone takes over what The New York Times calls
"a sprawling constellation of more than 30 organizations that operate in
places as diverse as Baltimore, Jakarta, the Kremlin and Congress." The
Times left out that the Soros network is laughably left-wing: pro-abortion,
pro-euthanasia, pro-gay marriage, pro-drug legalization, pro-union and
pro-government-funded media as well as anti-faith, anti-death penalty and as
anti-conservative as they come.
It's an important time for the foundations as Soros
himself just turned 81 and has decided that he wants the charity to continue
after his death. The foundations have focused on influencing America since late
in the first term of President George W. Bush, who Soros strongly opposed.
"I have to concentrate on what goes on in America. The fight for an open
society now has to be fought there," reported The Moscow Times in
2003.
And fight it he has. Cause after liberal cause gets tens
of thousands or even millions of dollars from Soros. According to the
foundations, their support goes to "fund a range of programs around the
world, from public health to education to business development." Some of
that is true, even in the United States. Soros funds after-school programs,
hospitals and the arts. While some of organizations have a liberal spin, they
aren't necessarily left-wing.
But much of it flows to hardcore left-wing organizations.
Eighty different liberal groups have received $1 million or more of Soros's
charity in that time. Human Rights Watch, The Drug Policy Alliance, The Tides
Foundation, National Public Radio, social justice initiatives and more all join
the lefty millionaires club - thanks entirely to Soros.
The Drug Policy Alliance alone
has received more than $31 million in those 10 years to oppose the "taboo
associated with drug use." That commitment has earned Soros the title
"sugar daddy of the legalization
movement" from conservative columnist Charles Krauthammer.
Prominent supporters of drug legalization - Sting, Soros himself, and former
talk show host Montel Williams - are featured in a Drug Policy Alliance videothat calls the
drug war a "war on people."
Some of Soros's other donations go to fund his extensive
network of liberal media outlets, which have received more than $52 million.
Those operations include a wide range of liberal news operations as well as the
infrastructure of news - journalism schools, investigative journalism and even
industry organizations.
All of that is designed to create what Soros has been pushing
for decades to achieve - what he calls an "open society." But what
exactly is an open society? In "Open Society: Reforming Global
Capitalism," he wrote that the concept is "an ideal to
which our global society should aspire." But his influences are more
complicated and more twisted.
Soros says he based the concept on works by philosopher
Karl Popper, who Soros considers his mentor. "Popper proposed a form of
social organization that starts with the recognition that no claim to the
ultimate truth can be validated and therefore no group should be allowed to
imposed its views on all of the rest," Soros wrote in "The Age of Fallibility:
Consequences of the War on Terror." "Open Society denotes
freedom and the absence of repression," he summed up.
In that 2000 book, the current head of Soros's Open
Society Foundations, Aryeh Neier, listed seven conditions of an open society
that sounded entirely positive. They included:
- "Regular,
free, and fair elections";
- "Free
and pluralistic media";
- "The
rule of law upheld by an independent judiciary";
- And "a
market economy."
It's a pretty fair description of the United States, the
very place Soros is trying to change. Looking at that list, it would be easy to
believe in the benevolence of Soros. But he's been at this a long time and his
public description has changed from something monstrous to something palatable.
In "Opening the Soviet System," which
came out 10 years earlier, Soros depicted a much different reality of an open
society. In a section entitled "Brave New World," he tried to
"carry the concept of an open society to its logical conclusion."
("Brave New World," is also the title of
Aldous Huxley's frightening view of a dystopian future where the global
government controlled the population through sleep conditioning and drugs.)
Soros said: "in an open society none of the existing
ties are final, and people's relation to nation, family, and their fellows
depends entirely on their own decisions. Looking at the reverse side of the
coin, this means that the permanence of social relationships has disappeared;
the organic structure of society has disintegrated to the point where its
atoms, the individuals, float around without hindrance."
And from there, the description gets worse. "Choices
arise which would not even have been imagined in an earlier age. Euthanasia,
genetic engineering, brainwashing become problems of practical importance. The
most complex human functions, such as thinking, may be broken down into their
elements and artificially reproduced. Everything appears possible until it has
been proven to be impossible."
Naturally, this new open society would take its toll on
the people living there. "Perhaps the most striking characteristic of a
perfectly changeable society is the decline in personal relationships,"
wrote Soros. "Friends, neighbors, husbands and wives would become, if not
interchangeable, at least readily replaceable by only marginally inferior (or
superior) substitutes." Even personal interaction is at risk in this
"open society." "Personal contact may altogether decline in
importance as more efficient means of communication reduce the need for
physical presence," he wrote.
At least there Soros was a bit honest: "The picture
that emerges is less than pleasing. As an accomplished fact, open society may
prove to be far less desirable than it seems to those who regard it as an
ideal." The added, however that any society "carried to its logical
conclusion" becomes "absurd." But he adds, "nevertheless,
it should be clear by now that, as an accomplished fact, Open Society may prove
to be far less desirable than it seems to those who regard it as an
ideal."
The ending of that section specifically mentions Huxley's
"Brave New World," along with "1984," and More's
"Utopia," as imagined futures that went wrong. Yet even a casual
reader can see many direct parallels between Huxley's world and the one Soros
aspires to.
Point by point, "Brave New World" skewers that
future. Huxley wrote about a one-world government - the "World State-
where drug use wasn't just legal, it was strongly encouraged. There, population
was restricted and citizens wore "Malthusian belts" with a ready
supply of birth control for almost mandatory promiscuity. Abortions were
performed in a "lovely pink glass tower" and actual births were done
in a lab under direct control of the powers that be. "Brave New
World" was written as satire of the other Utopias envisioned at the time.
It featured and prominent anti-individual and anti-family themes.
Religion, in Huxley's world, was one of the
"monstrous superstitions" confined to savages only and
"positively a crime against society," replaced by a feel-good drug
called "soma." Soma, readers were told, had "all the advantages
of Christianity and alcohol; none of their defects."
Soros criticized Huxley's work, but it's as if he used it
as a model for his charitable contributions - pro-one world government,
pro-abortion, pro-government controlled media, pro-drug and even pro-euthanasia
and against the very institutions that stand for traditional values such as
family and faith. Imagine if someone had read George Orwell's "1984"
and then tried to make it happen. That's what Soros has done, only with
another, equally awful look into the future.
Soros has spent hundreds of millions of dollars funding a
"Brave New World" for Americans and even he admits it won't turn out
well.
Recommendations
The Business and Media Institute has several
recommendations for news outlets on how they can improve their coverage of
George Soros and his foundations.
- Do Some
Genuine Journalism and Investigate Soros: George Soros is the embodiment of media bias. While the American
media obsess about almost any action of the libertarian Koch brothers,
they all-but ignore his one-man quest for global power. Soros has given
more than $8.5 billion to his Open Society Foundations, leaving an imprint
on more than 70 nations. Any business, organization or individual with
that kind of financing and international reach is ripe for investigation.
It’s time journalists did some digging on their own.
- Treat Public
Figures Equally: If
someone on the left squawks about Charles and David Koch, journalists from
some major news organizations jump to write about it. But criticisms of
Soros, his business practices and even his conviction seldom get noted by
the media. Journalists should treat all public figures equally.
- Don’t Ignore
Soros Connections to Major News Events: Newspaper front pages are filled with protests, complaints and
supposedly grassroots initiatives that are easily tied to Soros – through
the Center of American Progress and other entities he funds. But that
connection is almost never made made. Journalists ignore obvious funding
connections and sometimes don’t even check connections openly made on
organizational websites. It’s the job of news to show when organizations
are blatantly working together toward an end and to show the obvious ties
these groups might share.
The media often talk about left-wing billionaire George
Soros – especially his investments and his charity work. But those same news
stories seldom give a complete picture of the man behind many of the liberal or
“progressive” organizations in the United States and around the world.
Soros has amassed monumental wealth ($20 billion according to
Forbes), but he has used much of that money to underwrite political operations,
liberal higher education and an international organization that makes him one
of the most powerful and influential men in the world. It has also made him
among the most hated, not that the U.S. news media report on that. In fact, the
American media seldom tell anything about Soros’s problems abroad or his
hard-left agenda here at home. Some of the low points all-but ignored by the
media include his $3 million fine for insider trading in France and how he
operates his “own foreign policy” that often goes against U.S. interests.
The Media Research Center’s Business and Media Institute has
undertaken more than a year of investigation into George Soros, his business
dealings, his political involvement and his extensive connections to the media.
That investigation shows that much of the more than $8.5 billion Soros has
given to charity has in turned been used to advocate for hardcore left-wing
policies around the globe. Those findings include:
•
$400 Million to Manipulate Higher Education: Journalists who
thought the Koch brothers were dominating college funding with a mere $7
million should check out Soros. He’s given more than 50 times more and even
helped establish his own university, Central European University, which teaches
his own bizarre political/social philosophy of “open society.”
•
Global Scandals Largely Unreported: Soros has admitted to helping
start revolutions, funding radicals and attacking national currencies. His
insider trading conviction in France cost him $3 million and has been upheld by
European courts repeatedly. His foundations have been opposed by nations around
the globe, yet almost the only negative press he has received on ABC, CBS and
NBC was linked to a sex scandal with a 28-year-old Brazilian actress.
•
Political Contributions to Most Major Liberal Politicians: Soros
has personally funded some of the top names in America’s left from Barack Obama
to Nancy Pelosi. Soros donates hundreds of millions to politically active
liberal organizations as well. He’s even given $500,000 to the allegedly
neutral Center for Responsive Politics, which is the source for much of the
information on political donations.
•
More Than Half a Billion Dollars to Finance the Left: George Soros
aids hundreds of left-wing groups in America each year under the auspices of
his Open Society Foundations. Since 2000, Soros has given more than $550
million to liberal organizations in the U.S., underwriting every major liberal
initiative – pro-abortion, pro-euthanasia, pro-gay marriage, pro-drug
legalization, pro-union, pro-government-funded media and even attacks against
the concept of free elections and voting for judges.
Recommendations:
The Business and Media Institute has several recommendations for
news outlets on how they can improve their coverage of George Soros and his
foundations.
•
Do Some Genuine Journalism and Investigate Soros: George Soros is
the embodiment of media bias. While the American media obsess about almost any
action of the libertarian Koch brothers, they all-but ignore his one-man quest
for global power. Soros has given more than $8.5 billion to his Open Society
Foundations, leaving an imprint on more than 70 nations. Any business,
organization or individual with that kind of financing and international reach
is ripe for investigation. It’s time journalists did some digging on their own.
•
Treat Public Figures Equally: If someone on the left squawks about
Charles and David Koch, journalists from some major news organizations jump to
write about it. But criticisms of Soros, his business practices and even his
conviction seldom get noted by the media. Journalists should treat all public
figures equally.
•
Don’t Ignore Soros Connections to Major News Events: Newspaper
front pages are filled with protests, complaints and supposedly grassroots
initiatives that are easily tied to Soros – through the Center of American
Progress and other entities he funds. But that connection is almost never made
made. Journalists ignore obvious funding connections and sometimes don’t even
check connections openly made on organizational websites. It’s the job of news
to show when organizations are blatantly working together toward an end and to
show the obvious ties these groups might share.
“Alabama recently passed Senate Bill 477 unanimously in both of
its houses. The legislation bars the taking of private property in Alabama
without due process,” Investor’s Business Daily reports.
The bill specifically states the following:
Alabama and all political subdivisions may not adopt or implement
policy recommendations that deliberately or inadvertently infringe or restrict
private property rights without due process, as may be required by policy
recommendations originating in or traceable to Agenda 21.
But let’s back up for a bit and talk more about “Agenda 21.” If
you haven’t heard of it, you owe it to yourself to read up on it. Simply put,
it’s an international initiative that overrides personal property rights all in
the name of the environment and “sustainability.”
Here’s a good rundown via The Blaze’s Mike Opelka:
Agenda 21 is a two-decade old, grand plan for global ’Sustainable
Development,’ brought to you from the United Nations. George H.W. Bush (and 177
other world leaders) agreed to it back in 1992, and in 1995, Bill Clinton
signed Executive Order #12858, creating a Presidential Council on ‘Sustainable
Development.’ This effectively pushed the UN plan into America’s large,
churning government machine without the need for any review or discussion by
Congress or the American people.
[…]
The seeds for Agenda 21 were planted back in 1987 when the
writings of Gro Harlem Brundtland (a woman who was first Vice-President of the
Socialist International) caught the eye of the UN. Dr. Brundtland wrote a
report for the UN called, ‘Our Common Future’ eventually got into the business
of environmentalism as a tool to control all the people of the world and
establish a global government. The growth of ICLEI [International Council of
Local Environmental Initiatives] and the framework being put in place by
supporters of Agenda 21 appear to be bringing Dr. Brundtland’s ideas closer to
reality
As mentioned in the above, “Agenda 21” is little more than an
all-out attack on personal property rights. Indeed, as Opelka notes, the body
that drafted the initiative (the U.N.) has openly and without hesitation stated
its opposition property rights:
Land… cannot be treated as an ordinary asset, controlled by
individuals and subject to the pressures and inefficiencies of the market.
Private land ownership is also a principal instrument of accumulation and
concentration of wealth and therefore contributes to social injustice; if
unchecked, it may become a major obstacle in the planning and implementation of
development schemes. The provision of decent dwellings and healthy conditions
for the people can only be achieved if land is used in the interest of society
as a whole.*
Oh, and if that’s not reason enough to be wary of the U.N.’s
“sustainability” project, consider the following: “In 1997, George Soros’s Open
Society gave ICLEI a $2,147,415 grant to support its Local Agenda 21 Project.”
But despite the slow and steady growth of the project in the
United States, Alabama proves that, contrary to what some would have you
believe, not everyone’s asleep at the wheel.
However, even though Alabama’s Senate Bill 477 will be viewed by
many as a victory over “Agenda 21,” it doesn’t mean that the U.N. or the Feds
are anywhere near through with their “sustainable” agenda. In fact,
Environmental Protection Agency administrator Lisa Jackson will attend the
United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development later this month in Rio de
Janeiro, IBD reports.
“Specifically, in a transition to a green economy, public policies
will need to be used strategically to reorient consumption, investments and
other economic activities,” a U.N. document describing the conference explains.
“We don’t need ‘environmental governance,’” IBD writes, “just a
governance of, by and for the people of the United States.”
“Nor do we need to ‘reorient’ our consumption and economic
activities. Alabama has just told the U.N. and the EPA what they need to be
told — don’t tread on us,” the report concludes
* Source: United Nations Conference on Human Settlements (Habitat
I),Vancouver, BC, May 31 – June 11, 1976. Preamble to Agenda Item 10 of the
Conference Report.
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