It didn't take long for radicals to hit the streets after polls closed Tuesday night. From Washington, D.C., to Los Angeles, the "Resistance" fired up its riot machine.
Three victims were stabbed in D.C. Piles of bricks popped up in Kansas City, Denver, Chicago and elsewhere. Groups like Shutdown DC, Black Lives Matter and Antifa promise more. Much more.
Richard Poe, co-author with David Horowitz of "The Shadow Party," a probing look at George Soros' far-reaching influence, says the left-wing billionaire is staging a revolution.
"George Soros is trying to steal the election," Poe told D. James Kennedy Ministries, which produced the new, nationally aired documentary, "Radical Billionaire: George Soros and the Scheme to Remake America." Poe claims Soros "has a whole crack team of experts, the top experts in the world. … And they are absolutely trying to steal this election."
There's no question that Soros is determined to remove President Donald Trump. He assured elites at Davos in 2018 that Trump is a "purely temporary phenomenon that will disappear in 2020, or even sooner." That's not an idle boast. He poured some $70 million, at last report, into Democratic coffers to help evict Trump from the White House.
And Soros is no amateur at regime change. He has an established record of driving leaders from power. Horowitz and Poe assert that "Soros' Open Society Foundations have facilitated coups and rebellions in many countries, always ostensibly in the interests of 'democratization.'"
Soros crowed in 2001 that his Open Society Foundations network has achieved "significant successes" in Slovakia, Croatia, and Yugoslavia where "civil society was mobilized to overturn ... overcome, rather, an oppressive regime." (See here at 22:25). Soros tried to catch himself, but "overturn" is correct. That's obvious from how Soros-financed forces were deployed in Yugoslavia and, later, Georgia to sweep rulers off the stage.
In Yugoslavia, Soros-funded protesters clogged Belgrade's streets to contest and halt an election. Rather than wait for the outcome of a run-off vote, the Soros-bankrolled "Otpor," a militant 70,000-strong youth organization staged a coup, write Horowitz and Poe. And they did so, the authors explain, not by relying on Kumbaya sing-alongs, but on fists, boots, guns and Molotov cocktails. On Oct. 5, 2000, revolutionaries rioted in Belgrade, setting fire to the Federal Parliament Building and the headquarters of the state television network RTS. Janes' Sentinel reports that Otpor-led units armed with AK-47s, mortars and shoulder-launched antitank weapons set up road-blocks around Belgrade.
Then-President Slobodan Milošević resigned and was immediately arrested and sent off to the International Criminal Court for trial.
A Soros operative later told the Los Angeles Times: "We were here to support the civil sector – the people who were fighting against the regime of Slobodan Milošević. … Most of our work was undercover." British journalist Neil Clark called Slobodan's ouster the result of a nine-year, $100 million investment Soros made to fund and train the Serb resistance.
Soros used the same technique in Georgia where he warned President Eduard Shevardnadze he would put protesters on the streets to block vote fraud in the country's 2003 election. "It is necessary to mobilize civil society in order to assure free and fair elections," Soros declared in his public threat. "This is what we did in Slovakia at the time of Mečiar, in Croatia at the time of Tuđman and in Yugoslavia at the time of Milošević."
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