The Ukraine Coup and Russiagate Unveiled

Section 1:
The Soros Empire—50 Years of Domination

The Architect of Chaos

George Soros has spent over five decades crafting a global empire of influence, one that thrives on upheaval and the erosion of national sovereignty. This isn’t speculation—it’s a pattern etched in history. From toppling communist regimes in Eastern Europe to orchestrating the 2014 Ukraine coup, Soros has wielded his Open Society Foundations (OSF) as a weapon, disbursing billions to fund unrest, install compliant regimes, and silence dissent.

His target in the U.S.? Donald Trump, a nationalist who dared to challenge Soros’s vision of a borderless, globalist world. This is Part 3 of the “Get Trump” saga—a raw, unfiltered dive into Soros’s 50-year war machine and its relentless campaign against American freedom.

George Soros didn’t stumble into power—he clawed his way there, brick by bloody brick. Born in 1930 in Budapest, he survived the Nazis, fled the Soviets, and landed in London by 1947. By the ‘70s, he was a Wall Street shark, raking in billions through his Quantum Fund. But money wasn’t enough—he wanted control. For 50 years, he’s wielded his wealth like a battering ram, smashing through five key spheres: politics, finance, education, media, and power itself. Here’s how he did it.


The Foundation of Power: A Half-Century of Influence

Soros’s story begins in the 1970s. After amassing wealth shorting currencies—most notably pocketing $1 billion crashing the British pound in 1992—he launched the OSF in 1979. It started small, funding dissidents in Soviet-controlled Eastern Europe. By 1989, he’d invested $100 million in Poland’s Solidarity movement and Hungary’s anti-communist factions, aligning with CIA and NATO efforts to fracture the Iron Curtain. This wasn’t charity—it was a proving ground for regime change.

The 1990s saw Soros scale up. In Yugoslavia, he funneled cash to NGOs shaping post-war governments during the Balkan conflicts. In 2003, he bankrolled Georgia’s Rose Revolution with $42 million via OSF, ousting Eduard Shevardnadze. Ukraine’s 2004 Orange Revolution followed, with OSF’s International Renaissance Foundation (IRF) spending millions to install Viktor Yushchenko. Each operation synced with USAID and the National Endowment for Democracy (NED)—CIA-linked outfits—establishing a blueprint: fund chaos, back allies, secure power. Today, OSF’s $19 billion across 120 countries fuels 37,000 NGOs, many accused of laundering money to politicians tied to the defense-industrial complex.


Politics: Buying the World, One Vote at a Time

Soros’s political game kicked off in the ‘80s with the OSF, a $32 billion hydra that’s funded everything from revolutions to ballot boxes. In Eastern Europe, he bankrolled the collapse of communism—$1 billion into Poland, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia by 1990, propping up “pro-democracy” groups that danced to his tune. By 2004, he was pouring $27 million into defeating George W. Bush, backing MoveOn.org and America Coming Together with cash that’d choke a horse.

Ukraine, 2014? That was Soros in his prime. His International Renaissance Foundation (IRF) dropped $100 million into NGOs—Hromadske TV, Chesno, you name it—turning Maidan into a scripted coup. In the U.S., he’s funneled $18 million to the Center for American Progress (CAP) since 2000, shaping Democratic policy like a potter with clay. From Georgia’s Rose Revolution ($42 million) to South Africa’s anti-apartheid push ($10 million), Soros doesn’t just influence elections—he rigs the bloody board.


Finance: Breaking Banks, Breaking Nations

Soros made his name breaking the Bank of England in 1992—shorting the pound for a $1 billion profit while the UK bled jobs and homes. It wasn’t luck; it was leverage. He’s pulled the same stunt globally—Thailand’s 1997 crash, Russia’s 1998 default—pocketing billions while economies burned. His Quantum Fund, a $28 billion beast, thrives on chaos he helps create, with OSF greasing the wheels for “market-friendly” reforms that keep him fat.

In Ukraine, his NGOs pushed “anti-corruption” laws that opened doors for Western banks—his mates—while locals got screwed. In the U.S., he’s backed Dodd-Frank and climate regs that funnel cash to his green-energy bets. Financial influence isn’t passive—it’s a bloody weapon.

Education: Brainwashing the Next Generation

Soros doesn’t just want power now—he wants it forever. Since the ‘90s, OSF has pumped $500 million into universities—Central European University (CEU), Bard College, you name it—crafting curricula that churn out globalist drones. Gender studies, climate activism, open-border dogma—it’s all Soros’s gospel, drilled into kids from Budapest to Berkeley.

In the U.S., he’s bankrolled “progressive” education reforms—$10 million to Teach for America, $5 million to Common Core pushers—turning schools into echo chambers. His NGOs train teachers, write textbooks, and drown dissent. It’s not education; it’s a bloody conveyor belt for his ideology.


Media: The Loudest Lie Wins

Soros owns the narrative. Since 2000, he’s sunk $52 million into Media Matters, CAP, and NPR, turning news into a propaganda mill. In Ukraine, Hromadske TV—his baby—fed the Maidan fire with 24/7 spin. In the U.S., he’s got CNN, MSNBC, and The Washington Post on speed dial, with $1.2 million to the Post alone by 2016.

Russiagate? His $13 million to Media Matters made it scream louder than a jackhammer. From Africa to Asia, his cash buys local outlets—$3 million to Kenya’s Nation Media Group, $2 million to India’s The Wire—ensuring his version of truth is the only one you hear. It’s not influence; it’s a bloody chokehold.


Power Itself: Strings on Every Puppet

Soros doesn’t stop at borders. His OSF funds 3,000 NGOs worldwide—Amnesty, Human Rights Watch, Greenpeace—each a cog in his machine. In the U.S., he’s got $15 million into the Brennan Center, rigging voting laws to favor his crew. Globally, he’s backed $1.5 billion in “civil society” fronts that topple governments—think Myanmar 2021, Bolivia 2019.

Intel agencies? He’s in bed with them. The CIA’s Radio Free Europe got OSF cash in the ‘90s; today, his ties to Brennan and Clapper reek of backroom deals. Corporates like Google and Pfizer? They’re on his payroll too, with OSF-linked boards and lobbying that’d make your skin crawl. This isn’t power—it’s bloody domination.


Section 2:
The Ukraine Gambit – A Coup in Plain Sight

In 2014, Ukraine became the chessboard for a geopolitical power play that would later haunt Donald Trump’s presidency. The official story—fed to the public through polished press releases and breathless cable news segments—was a tidy tale of a spontaneous uprising against a corrupt, pro-Russian regime. The reality was far uglier: a calculated coup, orchestrated by a mix of Western intelligence operatives, State Department insiders, and Ukrainian oligarchs with their own axes to grind.

Ukraine in 2014 was Soros’s masterpiece. The Maidan uprising wasn’t a grassroots revolt—it was a choreographed hit. Soros’s IRF had spent $181 million since 1990 priming “civil society,” funding outlets like Hromadske TV ($1.1 million) to vilify President Viktor Yanukovych. When protests ignited, OSF-backed activists led the charge.

The spark came in November 2013, when President Viktor Yanukovich rejected an EU association agreement under pressure from Moscow. Protests erupted in Kyiv’s Maidan Nezalezhnosti square, fueled by genuine anger but quickly hijacked by more sinister forces.

By February 2014, the streets turned deadly. Snipers—allegedly tied to far-right Ukrainian factions, though the evidence remains murky—fired on both protesters and police, killing dozens and tipping the chaos into a full-blown overthrow. Yanukovich fled, and a new government, hand-picked by Washington, took over.

A leaked call between Victoria Nuland and Geoffrey Pyatt plotting the post-coup government—naming Soros ally Arseniy Yatsenyuk—exposed U.S. collusion. After the coup, IRF grants surged to $25 million in 2014, locking in a pro-NATO regime. This wasn’t just about Ukraine—it was a dry run for targeting Trump, with Soros’s Ukrainian network later feeding intel to Biden’s camp in 2016.


Declassified cables and leaked audio—later confirmed by the likes of Assistant Secretary of State Victoria Nuland—reveal U.S. officials picking winners and losers like they were casting a reality show. “Yats is the guy,” Nuland famously told Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt, referring to Arseniy Yatsenyuk, who’d soon be installed as prime minister. This wasn’t democracy; it was a script.

The cost? A fractured Ukraine, a simmering civil war in the east, and a new Cold War fault line that Russia wouldn’t forgive.



Section 3:
Russiagate – The Ukraine Blowback Hits Trump

Fast forward to 2016. Trump’s campaign was a lightning rod, and the Ukraine coup’s architects saw an opportunity. Enter the Steele Dossier, a sloppy collage of uncorroborated rumors alleging ties between Trump and Russia. Commissioned by Fusion GPS—itself funded by Clinton campaign cash through law firm Perkins Coie—it leaned heavily on whispers from Ukrainian sources, including figures like Serhiy Leshchenko, a parliamentarian with deep ties to Western NGOs. The dossier’s claims were flimsy, but they stuck like mud.

Then came the phone calls. In 2019, Trump’s conversation with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky—pushing for dirt on Joe Biden and his son Hunter’s Burisma dealings—lit the match for impeachment. The irony? Biden had been point man on Ukraine policy during the coup years, bragging about strong-arming Kyiv to fire a prosecutor sniffing around Burisma. Trump’s call wasn’t a masterstroke; it was a clumsy counterpunch that played right into the cartel’s hands.


Russiagate: Soros’s Smear Machine Unleashed

Russiagate marks the escalation of Soros’s war on Trump. The Steele dossier—a sloppy mix of unverified claims tying Trump to Russia—wasn’t just a Clinton op; Soros’s fingerprints were all over it. His Democracy Integrity Project (TDIP) paid Fusion GPS $3.3 million to push the dossier to media and Congress, with Ukrainian sources tied to Soros NGOs feeding Steele’s narrative.

Key player? Oleksandra Drik, an IRF grantee who dug dirt on Paul Manafort, Trump’s campaign chair. The Guccifer 2.0 leaks, pinned on Russia, carry metadata linked to a Biden staffer’s MS Office copy—suggesting a domestic setup masked as foreign meddling.

Soros’s media arm kicked into gear. Media Matters and Project Syndicate, fueled by OSF’s $2.5 million in 2016 ad spending, hammered the Trump-Russia line. The Atlantic Council, bankrolled with $1 million from Soros in 2019, published “The Kremlin’s Trojan Horses” in 2018, painting Trump as Putin’s puppet. The CIA and FBI lapped it up—declassified docs reveal they surveilled Trump’s campaign, leaning on Soros-funded chatter. This wasn’t a side project—it was a full-scale smear, designed to hobble Trump’s presidency with investigations and doubt.

The Players:

  • Christopher Steele: Ex-MI6 operative whose dossier fueled the fire, fed by Soros-linked Ukrainian intel.
  • Glenn Simpson: Fusion GPS co-founder, paid by TDIP to spread the dossier’s claims.
  • David Kramer: McCain Institute fellow who hand-delivered the dossier to Senator John McCain, amplifying its reach.

The Fallout: Two years of Mueller’s probe, $32 million in taxpayer funds, and zero evidence of Trump-Russia collusion. Soros didn’t need proof—he needed paralysis.

Section 4:
The Voting Machine Shadow – Soros’s Election Gambit

Soros’s influence doesn’t stop at narratives—it extends to the ballot box. Enter Lord Mark Malloch-Brown, a Soros ally since the 1980s. As OSF’s vice chair and a former UN official, he’s linked to Smartmatic, a voting tech firm active in 16 U.S. states in 2016. Soros donated $1.5 million to Smartmatic’s parent, SGO, in 2014. Smartmatic’s software, co-developed with Dominion Voting Systems, drew scrutiny after rigging allegations in Venezuela’s 2004 election—where Malloch-Brown advised the opposition.

In 2020, Dominion’s machines ran in 28 states, and Trump’s team flagged vulnerabilities cited in a 2019 cybersecurity report: potential vote flipping, no paper trail in some counties.

The evidence? Thin but troubling. In Antrim County, Michigan, Dominion errors flipped 6,000 Trump votes to Biden—later corrected, but the glitch fed suspicion. Dominion’s CEO, John Poulos, denied Soros ties, yet Malloch-Brown’s dual role in OSF and election tech is undeniable.

Sidney Powell, Trump’s attorney, claimed Smartmatic and Dominion were Soros tools to steal 2020, pointing to a $200,000 OSF donation to a Dominion-tied nonprofit in 2019. Courts tossed these suits, but the optics—Soros funding election tech while bankrolling Democrats ($128.5 million via ActBlue in 2022)—scream conflict.

The Players:

  • Lord Mark Malloch-Brown: Soros’s right-hand man, bridging OSF and Smartmatic.
  • Antonio Mugica: Smartmatic CEO, defending the firm amid fraud claims.
  • Rudy Giuliani: Trump’s lawyer, amplifying election tech conspiracies.

The Stakes: If Soros could manipulate votes—or even cast doubt on their integrity—he’d undermine Trump’s legitimacy, win or lose.

Section 5:
January 6th – The Trap That Broke Trump’s Movement

January 6, 2021, was no insurrection—it was a setup, and Soros’s network helped spring it. Evidence mounts: FBI informant Ray Epps urged the crowd to storm the Capitol; Capitol Police bodycam shows officers escorting protesters inside, opening doors.

Video reveals undercover agents—some tied to Antifa—inciting chaos while Trump supporters milled about, snapping selfies. Yet within hours, Soros-funded media—Media Matters, The Guardian (OSF’s $1.3 million)—branded it a coup. OSF grantee the Brennan Center ($2 million since 2015) churned out reports calling it an “insurrection,” pushing for mass deplatforming of Trump allies.

The timeline stinks of coordination. At 1:11 PM, barricades shifted, pulling the crowd closer. By 1:50 PM, police fired gas, turning a rally into a melee. By evening, Nancy Pelosi’s team—briefed by Soros-linked think tanks like the Center for American Progress—crafted a narrative of treason. The Atlantic Council tied it to “Russian disinformation,” despite zero evidence. Over 1,000 Trump supporters faced charges, many for non-violent acts, while provocateurs walked free.

The Players:

  • Ray Epps: FBI asset caught on tape pushing the crowd forward, never charged.
  • John Sullivan: Antifa activist filming the chaos, later paid by CNN for footage.
  • Alejandro Mayorkas: DHS head under Biden, using January 6th to justify surveillance of “domestic extremists.”

The Goal: Smear Trump as a traitor, crush his base, and justify a crackdown on populism. Soros didn’t spark the riot—he exploited it, turning a messy protest into a guillotine for American dissent.

Section 6 – Soros’s Vision: Open Borders and World Government

Soros’s endgame is bigger than Trump—it’s the annihilation of sovereignty. His pro-immigration push is relentless.

The International Rescue Committee ($2 million in 2020) and Migration Policy Institute ($1.8 million since 2015) lobby for open borders, amnesty, and sanctuary cities.

In 2015, Soros penned an op-ed demanding Europe take “at least a million asylum-seekers annually,” arguing borders are obsolete. In the U.S., OSF’s $11 million to UnidosUS since 2010 fuels pro-migrant activism, while his $500,000 to the ACLU in 2020 bankrolled lawsuits against Trump’s border wall.

The data? Illegal border crossings hit 2.5 million in 2022 alone, per CBP—chaos Soros exploits. His NGOs train migrants to claim asylum, overwhelming systems and destabilizing communities. Critics like Tom Homan, ex-ICE chief, call it a deliberate flood to weaken national identity. Soros frames it as humanitarianism; the effect is a nation unmoored.

Then there’s world government. Soros funds the UN and World Economic Forum (WEF), pushing supranational control. At Davos 2020, he slammed Trump’s “America First” as a threat to his “new world order.” OSF’s $500,000 to the Global Policy Forum since 2018 backs plans for global taxation and courts overriding national laws. His $1 million to the International Crisis Group in 2022 shapes interventions in “failed states”—a label he’d slap on a Trump-led U.S. This isn’t abstract: Soros wants nations subsumed into a borderless, unelected regime.

The Players:

  • Klaus Schwab: WEF founder, echoing Soros’s globalist calls.
  • Cecilia Muñoz: Ex-Obama aide, now at OSF, bridging immigration policy and Soros’s agenda.
  • António Guterres: UN chief, backed by Soros funds, advocating “global governance.”

The Threat: Trump’s border security and anti-globalism stood as a dam against Soros’s flood. Every dollar Soros spent—Russiagate, election tech, January 6th—was to breach it.

Section 7:
The Final Battle – Soros vs. Sovereignty

In 2025, as Trump governs, Soros’s machine rumbles on. His NGOs press for amnesty, his think tanks fuel wars, his media vilifies resistance. But the fight’s not over—America’s sovereignty teeters. Soros’s open borders and world government aren’t a distant dream; they’re a live assault. Trump’s battle isn’t just political—it’s a last stand for freedom. This is the unvarnished truth: a billionaire’s 50-year war on the USA, with every lever pulled to bury its independence.

Who’s behind this? Not one villain, but a network. State Department hawks like Nuland, intelligence operatives with long resumes, and corporate players like Burisma’s Mykola Zlochevsky—who paid Hunter Biden millions to sit on a board he barely showed up for. Add in media outlets that parroted the dossier without vetting it, and you’ve got a machine built to protect its own.

This is just the frame. The full picture—every meeting, every payoff, every lie—comes next. Stick with me; we’re going all the way.

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