George Soros
Perhaps the action tank run by Bill Clinton's White House chief
of staff John Podesta should be a little more circumspect before
throwing stones.
Think Progress, a Center for American Progress Action Fund blog,
parrots
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's clumsy talking points on the recent
tea party protests across the nation. Pelosi said the movement
"is funded by the high end - we call call it astroturf, it's not
really a grassroots movement. It's astroturf by some of the
wealthiest people in America to keep the focus on tax cuts for
the rich instead of for the great middle class." (See John
Gizzi's excellent profile of the Center for American Progress at
the Capital
Research Center website. Note that the Fund is a 501c4
organization that is officially a CAP affiliate.)
CAP has been beating the class-warfare drum and
demonizing Wall Street and the capitalist system itself in
order to promote President Obama's nakedly statist agenda.
Now it has joined the effort to delegitimize this legitimate
popular uprising, which bears more than a passing resemblance to
the same kind of uprising that forged this nation out the fires
of revolution, is funded by the same billionaire leftists who
want to destroy the American system.
Let's go over just a short list of the billionaire liberals who
pay CAP's bills with grant data I found in philanthropy
databases.
Herb and Marion Sandler, whom
Time magazine blames for the financial crisis, have given CAP
$7,150,000 through the Sandler Family Supporting Foundation
since 2004. George Soros, who spent around $24
million on left-wing 527 groups in 2004 to try to defeat
President Bush, has given CAP $510,000 through the Open Society
Institute since 2005. Rob Glaser of RealNetworks
has given CAP $1,891,000 since 2003 through the Glaser Progress
Foundation. Embattled New Jersey Gov. Jon
Corzine gave CAP $25,000 in 2003 through the Jon S.
Corzine Foundation.
And, shame on me for missing this
previously: a charity of Wall Street's poster child for
Fascist corporatism,
Goldman Sachs, funds CAP. The Goldman Sachs Philanthropy Fund
has given CAP $105,000 since 2007.