In the face of The Resistance™, Trump is rising the polls. Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Monday shows that 52 percent of likely US voters approve of the job Trump is doing.

The organizers of the “Hands Off” street performance might consider at some point whether want to keep going with this strategy. It seems to be producing the opposite effect. Corporatist propaganda confronts a now open media, and rational pundits like Scott Jennings make progressive pundits look like liars and lunatics. When progressives and the Democrats commanded social media they suppressed and de-platformed rational voices. When Elon Musk liberated Twitter from the censorship regime, he let progressives rant because he knew that they’re their own worst enemy.
Who are the organizers of the anemic color revolution? Among them are Open Society Foundations (created by multi-billionaire George Soros, now led by Alex Soros), which has shifted its focus toward direct political influence, organizing advocacy campaigns, legal defense funds, and protest infrastructure, and Sixteen Thirty Fund (administered by Arabella Advisors), which spends millions of dollars collected from anonymous donors. Those are two of several. These organizations provide resources for logistics and media campaigns. Thanks to the recent expansion and deepening of mutual knowledge facilitated by the more open system, the Resistance™ is becoming a money pit. At least that’s what the evidence suggests.
Now the People need the Supreme Court to do the right thing and get out of the way of the Trump agenda. But the people can’t depends on the Supreme Court. Congress must act to defund courts and impeach judges who are thwarting the popular will. Legislation is needed to restrict the tool of the universal injunction. The corporatists are getting desperate and they’re turning ever more aggressively to the machinery of government to deconstruct the American Republic. The judiciary is not the executive branch. Separation of powers is central to the republic scheme bequeathed to us by our forefathers. Government by judges is tyranny. Something must be done about this. Congress and the executive must reclaim the power given to them by the Founders.
The anti-democratic sentiment in the courts and on the left is a troubling thing. If the people don’t get a handle on it then the mob, frustrated by their increasingly inability to turn Americans against Trump, will ramp up its resort to vandalism and violence. One might think that limiting the judiciary in the corporatist project would provoke leftists to become even more terroristic. But ideologically-driven judges signal to the mob that their extreme behavior is appropriate—it encourages the elites who organize the mobs to turn to more drastic action by falsely portraying the President as an enemy of democracy.
What lies behind this is the transnationalism agenda. Its two major pieces, namely neoliberalism and globalism, intertwined in the hands of Democrats and their Republican allies (there are still many of them), provide the economic and ideological framework driving transnationalism. Neoliberalism promotes the free flow of capital, goods, and services across borders. Globalism seeks interconnectedness and the integration of nations through trade, cultural exchange, and international institutions, e.g. the IMF and the WTO.
Neoliberal policies—trade liberalization and multinational/transnational corporate expansion—facilitate globalism by creating a borderless economic environment, prioritizing corporate interests over national sovereignty and local economies. This twin force exacerbates inequality and erodes cultural distinctions, as globalism and neoliberalism homogenize markets and prioritize profit-driven systems over labor, environmental, and social concerns. This is the heart of the progressive agenda. It’s why progressives are protesting the removal of criminal aliens from the United States—if this hurdle is overcome, they know what follows is mass deportations. The color revolution and lawfare are part of a strategy to prevent this, which will undermine the Democrat’s electoral strategy and the corporate project to drive down wages for domestic labor. This is the politics of corporate power. And it is anti-worker.
It’s crucial for people to emphasize at every opportunity that the uprising is not organic. It’s a color revolution organized by global elites. Color revolutions have historically been a tool used by the global elite, working through government and nongovernmental organizations backed by corporate power, to change the governments of developing nations. Western organizations, such as Freedom House, the National Endowment for Democracy, US Agency for International Development, and Open Society Foundations provide funding, logistical support, and training to so-called pro-democracy groups in those countries. These forms of support include legal aid (lawfare) and media training (to create the illusion of grassroots resistance). While this assistance is publicly framed as “democracy promotion,” Western intelligence agencies, such as the CIA or MI6, covertly orchestrate these movements to undermine unfriendly regimes and install governments favorable to transnationalism.
More recently, the tactic of color revolution has shifted internally, to undermine and replace governments in the First World. This is a response to genuinely pro-democracy movements in the West, commonly known as populist-nationalism—the organic popular response to transnationalism. The United States witnessed the deployment of color revolution in the summer of 2020 and at other points during the first Trump presidency. With the reelection of Trump, the tactic has reappeared. The good news is that (so far) it’s not working to sway public opinion. But it’s something to worry about nonetheless because it indicates that there’s a concerted effort underway to forever alter the historical trajectory of the West and the way of life of its citizens.
