The left thinks somehow that President Trump is quaking in his boots over the so-called No Kings II Day (that is October 18th if you care). But the reality couldn’t be further from the truth. It’s not Trump or his supporters who should be worried. Those people are the radical networks behind Antifa and their financiers. The FBI, DOJ, Treasury, and even the IRS are all working in lockstep, monitoring organizations of interest, following the money trails, and dismantling what the administration has now labeled a “protest-industrial complex.”
For years, Antifa operated as if the streets belonged to them, especially in places like Portland where black-clad agitators wielded homemade shields and masks with impunity. But those days are over. Night after night, police and federal agents have turned the tide. They have been sweeping blocks with military precision, tagging targets with laser sights, and arresting ringleaders as their mobs scatter in fear. The bravado of “untouchable” radicals has been replaced by panic and retreat.
And the crackdown goes well beyond riot shields and pepper balls. The Trump administration has launched a scorched-earth campaign to cut off the lifeblood of Antifa: its funding networks. No longer is this just about street thugs, it’s about exposing the billionaire donors, dark-money groups, and foreign-linked financiers who pump millions into chaos. Soros’s Open Society Foundations, the Arabella Advisors network, and CCP-connected Neville Roy Singham are already finding themselves in the federal crosshairs. Even taxpayer dollars have been uncovered (over $100 million funneled, directly and indirectly, into Antifa-linked groups). Yes, American citizens have unknowingly subsidized the very chaos terrorizing their own cities.
The administration is wielding every tool at its disposal: RICO statutes usually reserved for the mafia, IRS probes into nonprofits, and intelligence operations mapping safehouses, intercepting communications, and exposing logistics hubs. Even Antifa’s supposed “academic arm” (like Rutgers professor Mark Bray, whose handbook became their operational guide) is feeling the pressure, fleeing abroad as the net tightens.
So when left-wing activists mock Trump’s supposed fear of “No Kings II Day,” they’re whistling past the graveyard. It is their movement (its money, its leaders, its shadowy infrastructure) that is in existential danger. Federal agencies are closing in, Silicon Valley enablers are on notice, and the days of chaos-for-hire are numbered.
