Soros-Backed protesters plan to disrupt Army’s 250th anniversary celebration

By 
 updated on June 13, 2025

Washington, D.C., braces for chaos as Soros-funded activists plot to overshadow the U.S. Army’s 250th anniversary parade.

The Trump administration is set to host a Grand Military Parade on Saturday in Washington, D.C., celebrating the Army’s 250 years of history, coinciding with Flag Day and President Donald Trump’s 79th birthday, while the Indivisible Project’s No Kings movement plans nationwide protests to steal the spotlight, as The Blaze reports.

The White House calls the parade a tribute to the Army’s legacy of defending freedom, but No Kings labels it a $100 million ego trip for Trump. “For 250 years, the U.S. Army has defended our nation, upheld the ideals of freedom and democracy, and served with courage,” the America 250 website declares. That’s a noble cause, not a dictator’s vanity project, despite what progressive playbooks claim.

Protests planned nationwide

Indivisible, born in 2016 to thwart Trump, announced its No Kings Nationwide Day of Defiance in early May. The group has rallied thousands of protest events across the U.S., dodging D.C. to dilute attention from the parade. Clever, but it reeks of orchestrated distraction.

No Kings protesters aim to “reclaim” American flags, waving them to push a narrative of universal freedom. Their rhetoric accuses Trump of authoritarianism, even claiming he’s eyeing a third term. “President Trump has already indicated that he’s aiming for at least a third term,” their toolkit smirks -- pure fearmongering, not fact.

George Soros’ Open Society Foundations funneled $7.2 million to Indivisible since 2018, including $3 million in 2023. The ACLU and AFL-CIO, the latter raking in $69 million in federal grants last year, are also tied to No Kings’ funding or sponsorship. Taxpayer dollars shouldn’t be bankrolling political stunts.

Training for confrontation

Since May 6, No Kings has orchestrated a detailed protest plan with virtual meetings and role assignments like safety leads and media speakers. They’ve rolled out ACLU’s “Know Your Rights Training” and a 32-page “Peacekeeper Training Workbook.” Sounds like they’re prepping for more than just chants.

Training calls, led by figures like Nadine Bloch of Beautiful Trouble, coach protesters on handling hecklers and armed counter protesters in open-carry states. “All people who show up with guns are not going to be our enemies,” Bloch says, urging caution. That’s a tightrope walk between prudence and paranoia.

No Kings expects over 2,000 protests with millions attending, armed with an 18-page toolkit and a hotline running June 11-14. Their obsession with logistics suggests they’re not just rallying -- they’re engineering a spectacle. This isn’t grassroots; it’s a corporate-style operation.

Peaceful or provocative?

Recent anti-administration protests, such as May Day and April 5’s Hands Off events, stayed mainly peaceful, with only 4% facing counterprotests, per Princeton’s Stephen Piggott. “We found that 99% of these protests saw no reports of violence,” Piggott notes. But past calm doesn’t guarantee future restraint.

Los Angeles’ recent anti-immigration riots, marked by property damage and arrests, cast a shadow. No Kings’ focus on “de-escalation” training hints they’re bracing for similar sparks. Why plan for peace while prepping for war?

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, fed up with unrest after clashes in Austin and Dallas, deployed 5,000 National Guard troops and 2,000 state police on Thursday. “Texas will not tolerate the lawlessness we have seen in Los Angeles,” Abbott warned. Good -- law and order must hold firm.

Who’s pulling the strings?

Groups like the Proud Boys are reportedly watching No Kings but haven’t mobilized widely, per Piggott’s data. “What we are not seeing is widespread calls from actors of concern to mobilize,” he says. Still, the left’s provocations could wake that sleeping giant.

Open Society Foundations claims they’re just supporting “peaceful democratic participation” without directing groups like Indivisible. Nice try, but $7.2 million isn’t pocket change -- it’s influence. Soros’ fingerprints are all over this defiance campaign.

The Army’s 250th anniversary deserves celebration, not sabotage by well-funded activists cloaking their agenda in flags. Trump’s parade may be bold, but it honors soldiers, not himself. No Kings’ attempt to hijack the narrative is just another progressive power play.

About Alex Tanzer

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