Establishment elites going all out to derail the Trump Express
By: Rachel Marsden
Welcome to the club, America! You're now experiencing first-hand what was
previously seen as something that only happened in foreign lands: an overt
electoral hijacking attempt by establishment elites.
What do you do when the democratic process turns out to be a bit too democratic,
in the sense that people on the side that's currently winning don't support your
worldview? You swarm it and use the media attention to issue your own manifesto.
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has the establishments on both
the left and the right so riled that they're no longer even being discreet in
pulling out all the stops to end his candidacy.
A group of billionaires and tech CEOs converged on a private island off the
coast of the state of Georgia earlier this month for the American Enterprise
Institute's annual World Forum. The gathering reportedly turned into a political
strategy session, with captains of industry teaming with "old boy" Republican
strategists and donors to plot a derailment of the Trump Express.
The tech guys are in panic mode because of Trump's hard-line stance on
immigration. They depend heavily on foreign-born employees who will work for
lower wages, leaving American workers on the sidelines. Trump threatens the
widespread hiring practices of the entire industry.
The money men are in the unfamiliar and highly uncomfortable position of not
being able to buy influence, because Trump won't take their cash. The
establishment old boys, as always, are just looking out for No. 1. If their
horse doesn't win the race, they can't score a gig in the new administration or
impress clients with their White House connections. They issue their anti-Trump
manifestos through current and former candidates such as Marco Rubio and Mitt
Romney.
Trump opposition from the left has taken a different form. A Trump rally in
Chicago was abruptly canceled last week after protests became unruly. Ilya
Sheyman, executive director of MoveOn.org Political Action, issued a statement
in support of the planned disruption of the Chicago rally. "MoveOn proudly
supported University of Illinois at Chicago students and local organizers in
their courageous nonviolent protest outside the event," said the statement. "We
helped student leaders by printing signs and recruiting MoveOn members to attend
the student-led protest."
It certainly seemed odd that after months of Trump campaign events, activists
would just organically decide to swarm a rally. News flash: You're being used,
guys. You're mere pawns in a billionaire's ongoing game of subversion. And that
billionaire isn't Donald Trump.
George Soros, whose net worth is estimated at $23 billion, was a prominent
supporter of President Barack Obama's White House bid, and a significant number
of administration appointees were drawn from Soros-funded think tanks. Soros is
also a major funder of MoveOn.org.
America isn't the only place where Soros has attempted to flex his political
muscle. In November, Russia's general prosecutor's office banned the
Soros-funded Open Society Foundations and Open Society Institute Assistance
Foundation, calling their activity "a threat to the foundations of the
constitutional system of the Russian Federation and the security of the state."
Soros then wrote an opinion piece for The Guardian earlier this year in which he
cast Russian President Vladimir Putin as an enemy of Europe. "Attacks mounted by
jihadi terrorists, however terrifying, do not compare with the threat emanating
from Russia," Soros wrote.
Yeah, right -- just like the threat of special interests in American politics
does not compare with the threat emanating from Donald Trump? Anyone else see a
pattern here?
Soros is the establishment writ large. The little people are nothing but cannon
fodder for him and for the policies that further his interests, in America and
abroad.
Other than political ideology, there is little difference between the Silicon
Valley titans, the permanent members of the Democratic and Republican
establishments and their bagmen, and billionaires like Soros with their useful
leftist tools.
This election isn't about left versus right. Instead, this election pits those
who feel entitled to shape America the way they see fit and impose their
worldview on everyone else against hardworking citizens who are sick of seeing
wealthy and influential meddlers interfere with the translation of the popular
will into a sensible national agenda.
This is the last stand of the political establishments, and they're using every
tactic in their arsenal. If Trump wins, they lose. They can only win if voters
are duped into buying what they're selling.
COPYRIGHT 2016 RACHEL MARSDEN