
by Smokahontas at X
Why George Soros has been expelled, restricted, or targeted by legislation in countries like Hungary, Russia, Turkey, Pakistan, Poland, and the Philippines yet operates freely inside the United States.
The explanation hiding in plain sight is this: Soros functions as a civilian financial force aligned with U.S. foreign‑policy interests, particularly around regime‑change politics and “democracy promotion.” Whether formal or informal, the overlap between Soros‑funded NGOs, U.S. government backed entities like USAID and the National Endowment for Democracy, and CIA‑aligned objectives has been documented by journalists, whistleblowers, and foreign governments for decades.
From Serbia to Georgia, Ukraine, and the Arab Spring, the same funding networks, branding, and activist training pipelines keep reappearing. Soros didn’t invent “color revolutions,” but his Open Society network undeniably financed and professionalized them. That’s why foreign governments don’t see him as a philanthropist, they see him as political infrastructure.
Libya and Syria were turning points. Gaddafi warned Europe that his removal would unleash mass migration from Africa. He was killed, Libya collapsed, and within a few years Europe faced exactly the crisis he predicted. Migrant flows didn’t move organically they followed NGO corridors, legal pipelines, social‑media coordination, and logistical support that mirrored earlier regime‑change playbooks.
Analysts like Wayne Madsen were openly arguing this wasn’t chaos, it was social engineering.
Fast‑forward to the U.S.
In 2020, Soros‑linked foundations donated tens of millions of dollars to activist groups involved in mass protests and policy campaigns. Soros‑backed PACs helped elect progressive prosecutors and district attorneys across major cities. Immigration NGOs tied to his funding network provided legal aid, mapping, and coordination at the southern border. None of this is secret… it’s publicly reported. The dispute is over intent.
Supporters call it philanthropy. It’s a domestic version of the same political pressure tactics used abroad.
That’s why Soros isn’t just tolerated in the U.S. he’s untouchable. No serious congressional effort. No DOJ action. No presidential challenge. Not because he lacks power but because he fits neatly inside the system.
JFK once said, after the Bay of Pigs, that he wanted to “splinter the CIA into a thousand pieces and scatter it to the winds.” He never got the chance. Sixty years later, critics argue we’re living inside a world shaped by unaccountable intelligence power, privatized through billionaires and NGOs.
Even at the state level, questions are being raised. In Kentucky, Governor Andy Beshear has faced scrutiny over indirect political support from Soros‑aligned PACs and a public meeting with Alex Soros at the World Economic Forum.
If Hungary a population 9 million can pass “Stop Soros” laws and push these networks out, why can’t the United States even debate it?
WATCH:
Continue ReadingWhy George Soros has been expelled, restricted, or targeted by legislation in countries like Hungary, Russia, Turkey, Pakistan, Poland, and the Philippines yet operates freely inside the United States.
The explanation hiding in plain sight is this: Soros functions as a civilian… pic.twitter.com/XeYnUDufro
— Smokahontas (@Smokahontas2024) February 2, 2026