The CCP bought its way into America. It paid activists to riot, professors to lie, Wall Street to look away, and a small, rotten class of rich traitors to turn our own institutions against us. The money is Chinese, the mouths are American, and the target is this country.
Neville Roy Singham sits at the top. The Chicago tech multimillionaire cashed out, moved to Shanghai, and built a dark‑money machine for Beijing. Through shells like United Community Fund and Justice Education Fund, he sprays tens of millions at The People’s Forum, ANSWER Coalition, PSL, Code Pink, and a long list of campus fronts that chant the CCP script on Israel, “imperialism” and “American evil.” His companies directly supply signs, t-shirts, and transportation for far-left protests and riots.
Capitol Hill investigators now describe Singham’s network as the main financial artery between Chinese propaganda and the mobs burning flags, shutting campuses, and demanding U.S. defeat.
Jodie Evans plugs into the same artery. The Code Pink boss, and Singham’s wife, dresses Beijing’s agenda up as pink‑haired “peace” activism. Code Pink lives on Singham‑linked money and pays it back by shilling “China is Not Our Enemy,” defending Uyghur camps, and lobbying Congress to gut sanctions that could hurt the regime. Evans smiles with Chinese diplomats and United Front operatives, then sends her people to harass U.S. troops, ICE, and Israel so the CCP can point to “American” support while its own fingerprints stay off the scene.
Larry Fink and BlackRock run the financial flank. BlackRock manages about $10 trillion and wires U.S. retirement money into Chinese joint ventures and A‑shares, feeding PLA‑linked and surveillance firms that the Pentagon labels a threat.
A 2025 report from the Coalition for a Prosperous America details how BlackRock pushes billions into CCP‑connected companies even while politicians babble about “de‑risking” from China. Fink lectures Americans about ESG and “values investing” while underwriting the world’s biggest polluter and most advanced police state, playing global banker for a one‑party dictatorship.
Behind them stand the CCP’s billionaire enforcers, the “private” tycoons in the National People’s Congress who act as offshore agents. Princeling heirs and tech moguls move money into Western media, sports, green energy, and tech under one rule: the party can seize everything if they stop serving its war aims. They buy stakes and sponsorships, then pressure partners to stay quiet about Taiwan, Hong Kong, genocide, and spying, turning whole industries into obedient cowards afraid of losing Chinese cash.
Underneath all of this runs a sewer of CCP‑aligned media owners and NGO funders inside our civil society. CFR and others admit that pro‑China business interests have captured most of the Chinese‑language press in America and welded it to United Front messaging.
The same networks bankroll “friendship associations,” climate outfits, and campus groups that lobby city halls, flood social media with CCP narratives, and shout “racist” or “warmonger” at anyone who tries to cut the cord. These people are rich collaborators cashing Beijing’s checks while they help dismantle the country that made them possible. They are, quite frankly, evil manipulators.