in ,

Exposing the Far-Left: Protests or Political Warfare?

Independent journalist Nate Friedman recently appeared on Newsmax’s National Report to blow the whistle on what he calls organized Communist and far-left networks operating inside supposedly “spontaneous” protests. Friedman didn’t mince words, arguing that many of these activists and their backers are intent on upending the free-market system that built this country.

Friedman presented footage and on-the-ground reporting showing coordination by groups such as Rise and Resist and the People’s Forum, and he traced fundraising links to platforms like ActBlue. He warned viewers that while many participants may be sincere, the operation behind the scenes is professional and well-funded, not a grassroots uprising of ordinary Americans.

Meanwhile, Zohran Mamdani — a self-identified democratic socialist who has risen in New York politics — has become a focal point for these activists, drawing support from far-left and DSA-aligned circles while sparking alarm among business owners and concerned citizens. Mamdani’s record and rhetoric have raised legitimate questions about whether his policies would protect small businesses, property rights, and the economic freedoms that sustain working families.

The strange reality is that some explicitly Communist groups have even schooled Mamdani for being insufficiently radical, accusing him of betraying the working class and demanding more than reforms — they want a wholesale dismantling of capitalism. That’s not theory or harmless idealism; it’s a political program that seeks to replace private enterprise with state control.

This ideological ferment has spilled into big demonstrations, like the “No Kings” protests that have mobilized across cities and college towns — events that on the surface claim to be about democracy but are frequently overlapped by hard-left organizing and disruptive tactics. Those mass rallies are the perfect terrain for professional agitators to recruit, intimidate, and radicalize otherwise disengaged citizens.

Friedman’s reporting pulled back the curtain on slogans and rhetoric that ought to alarm every American — chants and signs that flirt with violence or lawlessness, paired with explicit fundraising and activist infrastructure. When your political opposition brags about “by any means necessary” and coordinates through centralized donor platforms, this is not civic protest, it is political warfare.

Conservatives should treat these revelations as a wake-up call: defending capitalism and the rule of law isn’t a partisan slogan, it’s a defense of the way of life that feeds families, funds schools, and keeps neighborhoods safe. We cannot allow a well-funded coalition of radicals to rewrite the rules of free enterprise under the cover of street theater and viral outrage.

It’s time for elected officials, community leaders, and everyday Americans to stop pretending all protests are the same and start demanding transparency, accountability, and real condemnation of those who call for the downfall of the market system. Speak up for small businesses, for property owners, and for workers who will be crushed by the very policies these activists promote.

Patriots who love liberty must push back with facts, ballots, and unflinching resolve — and refuse to let America be remade in the image of failed ideologies that have destroyed prosperity wherever they’ve been tried.

Written by admin

New Yorkers Face a Crucial Choice: Socialism or Common Sense Governance