Blog #141 “No Kings” Protests a Cover for ANTIFA!
The ‘No Kings’ Protests Are Cover For Antifa Mobilization
Chad Davis from United States, CC BY 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
The name, on its face, is unobjectionable, even vaguely noble: “No Kings.” Americans, after all, did declare independence from one. But the historical overtones here mask something more recent and considerably less authentic. For all its revolutionary rhetoric, the ‘No Kings’ protest movement is not a spontaneous uprising of civic-minded dissidents. It is a coordinated, well-funded, tightly stage-managed campaign, backed by nearly 200 far-left NGOs, labor unions, and donor networks, many of which are directly tied to the Democratic Party‘s power infrastructure. It operates not from the street, but from the spreadsheet.
To steelman the claim that the ‘No Kings’ protests are paid astroturf operations designed to provide public cover for coordinated far-left agitation, one must distinguish between form and function. On the surface, these protests resemble a decentralized, citizen-led response to Trump-era politics. But scratch that surface and a very different anatomy is revealed: one in which the language of democracy is borrowed as a façade for premeditated political theater. The clearest sign of this disconnect lies in the funding, the structure, and the behavior of the protests themselves.
Begin with funding. The American Federation of Teachers, one of the largest public sector unions in the US and a primary financial arm of the Democratic Party, is a key sponsor. Its president, Randi Weingarten, has explicitly endorsed the ‘No Kings’ protests, directing member organizations and funds to support the demonstrations. That alone should give pause. A movement that claims to speak for “the people” but is bankrolled by one of the most entrenched special interest lobbies in American politics does not qualify as grassroots. Nor do movements supported by Indivisible, a progressive organizing network seeded with funds from the Open Society Foundations, which was created and sustained by George Soros. Indivisible, whose stated goal is to reshape American institutions, has become the logistical backbone of these protests. They have created protest toolkits, coordinated permits, provided bail funds, and trained marshals to give the appearance of spontaneous civic action while actually scripting it.
Consider also the presence of leaders like Morris Pearl, former Managing Director of BlackRock, now head of the Patriotic Millionaires, a far-left advocacy group that champions tax increases, redistribution, and class warfare. What possible alignment could exist between anarchist slogans and hedge fund alumni? Only this: both see value in leveraging chaos. Pearl and his contemporaries do not wear black masks or throw bricks, but they underwrite those who do.
There is also the choreography of the events. In Atlanta, observers noted the conspicuous presence of uniformed protest marshals, wearing safety vests and approaching individuals who spoke out of turn or criticized the protest’s goals. In a true grassroots protest, speech is free. But here, free expression is moderated by hired staff, some of whom have been paid through funds routed by the aforementioned NGOs. The illusion of safety is reinforced by police officers standing alongside the agitators, most of whom are reportedly paid via third-party arrangements to provide security services, not law enforcement in the usual sense, but theater police. The goal is not order, but optics. Should violence erupt, as it often does when Antifa-linked groups appear, the sponsors can claim plausible deniability: that they took steps to ensure peace. The legal term is insulation. The real-world term is cover.
Most telling, however, is the brevity and structure of the events themselves. In city after city, ‘No Kings’ protests are officially scheduled for only two hours. Why? Because those hours are designed to secure media coverage, before dispersing the moderates and allowing more aggressive actors to take their place. It is in the after-hours that the dog whistle rings loudest.
The term ‘No Kings’ may sound tame to the average liberal, but to those within Antifa and anarchist circles, it is a slogan loaded with militant history. The phrase “No Gods, No Masters,” often modified to “No Gods, No Kings,” is an established anarchist mantra, dating back to 19th-century labor radicalism. It connotes total rejection of authority, religious, civil, and institutional. As Kyle Shideler of the Center for Security Policy notes, this slogan is not an accident. It is a signal to militant groups that their participation is not merely welcome, but ideologically affirmed. Moreover, the irony is impossible to ignore: if Donald Trump truly were a king, as the slogan suggests, these demonstrators would not be gathering publicly, waving signs and shouting slogans. In monarchies, dissent is punished, not platformed. The very fact that ‘No Kings’ protests can be organized and broadcast so widely disproves their central conceit.
In the days leading up to the June 14 protests, flyers emerged online, distributed by anonymous Antifa-linked accounts on social media, urging participants to engage in illegal behavior. These flyers were bilingual, printed in English and Spanish, and made available as downloadable PDFs for mass printing and distribution. They called for active resistance to law enforcement, citing previous riots in Los Angeles as models to emulate. These were not random provocations. They were premeditated directives. The fact that such materials were circulated in conjunction with ‘No Kings’ branding indicates that the movement’s identity was being intentionally co-opted, or more plausibly, was designed to accommodate such co-optation from the outset.
Indivisible has tried to maintain the fiction that it is committed to nonviolence. Their official press guidance states that “a core principle behind all No Kings events is a commitment to nonviolent action.” But this disavowal collapses under scrutiny. A group truly committed to nonviolence does not conscript anarchist terminology, does not coordinate with Antifa-aligned activists, and does not release rally planning materials into the same ecosystem where Molotov-throwers congregate.
The central question then is whether these Democratic NGOs and unions can claim innocence when the violence begins. Their defenders will say yes, citing the safety marshals, the paid security, the de-escalation training. But this is like handing out fire extinguishers at a controlled burn you secretly hope becomes a wildfire. These precautions are not safeguards, they are legal fictions. Prosecutors, if properly motivated, could reasonably argue that the sponsors knowingly facilitated an environment conducive to political violence. The coordination, the funding, the slogan selection, and the cohabitation with Antifa-aligned networks all point to a unified enterprise.
There is precedent for this line of reasoning. In racketeering law, when a legitimate enterprise is used to facilitate unlawful activity, the organizers are not exonerated by the lawful pretext. If a political protest is used as a vehicle for recruitment, agitation, and ultimately riot, the fact that it was nominally scheduled to be nonviolent does not absolve those who created the conditions for the escalation. The fact that these protests were dispersed across hundreds of cities only underscores the planning capacity, and the intent to create flashpoints that would exceed the control of their visible organizers.
This is what makes the ‘No Kings’ protests such an instructive case. They exemplify how political elites can manufacture dissent in form while retaining control in function. The masses provide the moral theater. The NGOs provide the money. The radicals provide the spark. And the media provides the fog of ambiguity through which blame can be endlessly diffused. But clarity, when pursued rigorously, dispels fog.
We should not pretend that slogans like “No Kings” operate in a vacuum. They resonate precisely because they carry historical weight. That weight is being exploited here, weaponized by factions that want both legitimacy and disruption, both deniability and impact. But more than that, they are being manipulated by Democrat-aligned NGOs to achieve a very specific narrative goal: to manufacture unrest and lay its consequences at Donald Trump’s feet. The organizers do not merely tolerate the chaos that follows these events, they anticipate it, even rely on it. Their objective is not to prevent violence, but to provoke it just enough that the media can assign responsibility to the sitting President. It is not Trump who wants chaos in the streets. It is the professional activists, the Democratic strategists, and the donor-class foundations who orchestrate these spectacles and then step back, feigning shock. But the American people should not be fooled. The blame does not lie with the President. It lies with those who lit the match and now pretend to hold a fire extinguisher.
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