Patriots, get ready for fireworks. Tuesday's House committee hearing promises to blow the lid off one of the most insidious threats facing our republic: foreign adversaries bankrolling domestic organizations to tear America apart from the inside.
The hearing, titled "Follow the Money," will examine how Chinese Communist Party operatives have allegedly been funneling cash to American nonprofit organizations—many of which coincidentally happen to support the radical left's agenda of chaos and division.
This isn't just about foreign influence—this is about warfare by other means. While Democrats and their media allies spent years shrieking about imaginary Russian collusion, the real threat was staring us in the face: Communist China systematically buying influence in American civil society.
The Deep State's Blind Spot Exposed
For too long, federal agencies turned a blind eye to this obvious security threat while they were busy targeting concerned parents at school board meetings and Trump supporters. Now, under President Trump's second administration, we're finally getting answers.
Think about it: How many of these so-called "grassroots" protest movements that terrorized American cities were actually astroturf operations funded by Beijing? How many nonprofit organizations claiming to fight for "social justice" were really just Chinese intelligence assets in disguise?
The timing of this hearing is no coincidence. With Trump back in the White House and Republicans controlling Congress, we finally have leaders willing to ask the hard questions the swamp creatures desperately wanted buried.
"It's time to follow the money and expose how our enemies have been weaponizing American nonprofits against the American people," said one congressional source familiar with the investigation.
This hearing represents exactly why we voted for Trump—to drain the swamp and expose the corrupt networks that have been selling out America for decades. While establishment politicians in both parties looked the other way, foreign adversaries were buying influence right under our noses.
The question isn't whether foreign money corrupted American institutions—it's how deep the corruption goes and who knew about it.
