George Soros



I'm proud of my enemies. When I look at the enemies I have all over the world, I must be doing something right. George Soros is a Hungarian-born billionaire. Most people don't know much about him, and his name and appearance makes him look like a Bond villain (plus, his surname is a palindrome). What better guy to portray as the brain to which the entire progressive movement is beholden? The movement is easier to demonize when it seems like it's all the machination of a rich evil bastard who's allegedly part of the International Jewish conspiracy theory. In reality, what he's doing is fairly innocuous. Indeed, Soros has done some good in the world by funding district attorneys who oppose the War on (Some) Drugs (so he can smoke dope in Albany?). Perhaps one day the state can mind its own business rather than spending oodles of money on non-violent drug offenders. However, there are legitimate criticisms of him (mostly from the left), as one does not become a billionaire without exploiting the proletariat.

That being said, it's important to gain some perspective on Soros' actual power. Soros' net worth was $8.3 billion as of 2019, and $32 billion has been spent by him on philanthropy previously; his net worth and his previous expenditures together total $40 billion. Charles and David Koch, two multi-billionaires who regularly donate to conservative causes, could buy and sell Soros' peasant ass two times over due to having a combined net worth of $90 billion. Moreover, in 2001-2012, 92 out of 100 richest U.S. billionaires contributed to a political cause; they have combined wealth of $2200 fucking billion, and they mostly contributed to conservative causes. So why all the fuss about Soros when there are much more powerful people out there?

Despite how stupid this hysteria is, Soros is a favorite boogeyman of the far right. To them, Soros is a dark and mysterious figure who is responsible for astroturfing the entire left wing of not only the United States, but the entire left worldwide. Even President Trump, while throwing a fit because of what Soros said about him back in 2016, has gotten in on the action by tweeting in October of 2018 that people protesting against Brett Kavanaugh's Supreme Court nomination were "paid for by Soros and others." This is only one sign that Soros conspiracy theories have become mainstream.

Even worse, Soros conspiracies seem on the verge of causing real-world violence. , the man behind the 2018 United States mail bombing attempts, drew inspiration from conspiracies that claimed Soros was paying refugees to come to the United States. The FBI learned in 2017 that a far-right militia in New Mexico was training with assault weapons in the hopes of murdering former President Barack Obama, former presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, and their perceived backer George Soros.

RationalWiki is, of course, a proud recipient of Soros' dark money, because we're all a bunch of evil Zionists who want to destroy Western civilization and usher in a one-world Atheist/Islamist/Socialist/Communist government.🇱🇮

Becoming the boogeyman
Soros actually made modest donations to the GOP in the 1980s and 1990s, and the GOP initially considered Soros an ally because of his opposition to communist dictators. Soros ceased donating to the GOP after George W. Bush invaded Iraq in 2003 based on, ahem, shall we say, faulty intelligence.

George Soros has since become a well-known funder of various liberal organizations, including the Center for American Progress, MoveOn.org, and a princely $1 million donation to Media Matters. It was speculated that he gave funds to the Occupy movement in 2011; however, this was proven not the case. He also funds a whole bunch of NGOs, mostly dealing with civic supervision over governments, which is something authoritarian parties (e.g.   ) don't like.

Soros famously bet against the British pound in 1992, causing investors to panic and earning himself $1 billion. He subsequently turned around and used his infamy to begin advocating for tighter regulation of international markets. Hatred towards him from the American right began in 2007, when Fox News pundit Bill O'Reilly went on a ten-minute rant about how he is an "extremist" who supposedly bought up control of the American left and has become "off the chart dangerous." (Scary!) Glenn Beck concocted a conspiracy theory in which Soros secretly bankrolled communist eastern European regimes despite the fact that he actually supported anti-communist opposition parties in these states. Beck also amusingly used three giant chalkboards, a wooden pointer, various props, and literal marionette puppets to explain how Soros was behind a "shadow party" that wanted to create a "one-world government". A decade later, Soros hasn't taken over, yet far-right conspiracy theorists still believe this stupid shit.

The mastermind behind everything we don't like!
Donald Trump, his son and his Republican cronies blame Soros for just about everything that inconveniences them. They claim Soros has taken over Black Lives Matter to promote socialism, somehow They claim that Soros paid all of the anti-Kavanaugh protesters, because clearly there's no way that any Americans would be opposed to Kavanaugh without some kind of monetary compensation. They've even JAQed off about whether Soros is funding the wave of Central American refugees trying to seek asylum in the US (as if refugees need motivation). Sean Hannity brought a guest on his segment to claim that the migrant caravans were an "assault" on the United States sponsored by George Soros. Breitbart hopped on the bandwagon by claiming that Soros was behind a plot to stage a massive anti-Trump protest in April 2017.

The Women's March? Engineered by Soros. The Mueller investigation? It used resources controlled by Soros! Colin Kaepernick? Popularizing the hatred of America on behalf of his "buddy Soros," according to Tomi Lahren. As fact-checking site Snopes has gained prominence, some conspiracy theorists are claiming that Soros is behind it too, because when the facts are against you, better blame the fact-checkers! Particularly disgusting cranks claimed that victims of school shootings around the US are in fact crisis actors paid for by you-know-who.

Conspiracy theorists aren't even above outright altering photographs to suit their agenda. Climate activist Greta Thunberg was accused of being a Soros proxy after pictures circulated of her standing next to him. In reality, she was with Al Gore, and some internet busybodies decided to Photoshop Soros' head on Gore's body.

He wants to destroy America!
Infowars has repeatedly claimed that Soros wants to destroy America and the whole world, making videos like "George Soros Is About To Overthrow The U.S." or " Trump Pulls World From Brink Of Nuclear War: Soros Outraged". Viral Facebook memes have been circulated by cranks showing an obviously fake quote from Soros: "I’ve made my life’s mission to destroy the United States. I hate this country and I hate all of the people in it!"

Why is this idiocy so popular? Well, the unfortunate fact is that large segments of the American right consider basic political advocacy (by the other side) and criticism of the government (but only when the right is in power) as "wanting to destroy America." Soros is vocally anti-Trump. Therefore he hates America. The irony is lost on the far right that identifying their movement and their leader with the whole country is way more directly harmful to American politics than Soros could ever be.

Far-right hysteria in Europe
Soros is also a hated figure among Europe's populist far-right parties and politicians. Romanian politicians used the same "paid Soros protesters" card in 2017 to dismiss an event that involved half a million of their country's citizens. Soros has also been blamed for things like the Catalan independence movement (because what better way to achieve a one-world government than by making more countries, eh?) as well as any bad thing that happens in Romania. Polish leaders blame Soros for promoting multiculturalism. He has also been attacked by Turkish President Erdoğan, who used Soros conspiracies to justify jailing opposition figures. Erdoğan's specific quote refers to Soros as "The famous Hungarian Jew" who "assigns people to divide nations and shatter them."

In his home country, Soros has an enemy in Viktor Orbán, Hungary's far-right leader. Orbán has repeatedly passed legislation targeting Soros' non-profits and even forced the famous Central European University to leave the country due to its ties to Soros. He claims that Soros is encouraging and benefiting from the refugee crisis. A bill in 2018 declaring that it was criminal to aid refugees in Hungary was called the "Stop Soros Law", and subways in Budapest had posters of Soros' face on the floors for commuters to trample on. The government of a sovereign country is literally waging a political war against one man over conspiracy theories.

Elsewhere in Europe? The Russian government has as of 2015 banned all of George Soros' philanthropic organizations from operating in Russia as a threat to national security. *In the UK the right-wing press has gone into hysterics about his funding of pro-European Union groups, talking of a "secret plot" against Brexit in terms that bring to mind talk of secret international Jewish conspiracies.

White supremacist Steve Bannon has made no secret of the fact that he hopes to use Soros conspiracies as a means to further mobilize Europe's far right.

In Ukraine, the pro-Russia party loves to accuse their political opponents of working for Soros (ironically,  is Jewish himself).

Cue the anti-Semitism
Being known as "The Man Who Broke the Bank of England," Soros is featured in many international Jewish conspiracy theories (and he usually has ties to the Rothschild family in those theories, of course), e.g. by the John Birch Society and others. During the 1997-98 southeast Asian financial crisis, Malaysian premier Mahathir bin Mohamad fingered Soros as the head of a Jewish cabal that had caused the crisis. This began a feud between the two that lasted until 2006, when Mahathir apologized.

Jews in Hungary have noted that the intense anti-Soros campaign there seems to be a vehicle for overt antisemitism, much as birtherism is used here as a dog whistle for racism. In the States, Breitbart has used Nazi-inspired antisemitic imagery and rhetoric to demonize Soros. Glenn Beck repeatedly used another historically antisemitic image to refer to Soros, that of the supposed "puppet master."

Soros' Holocaust experience
soros, who was 9 y/o on V-Day, was the architect of the holocaust.

In reality, Soros was born on August 12, 1930 in Budapest. That would have made him 13 years old when Nazi Germany invaded Hungary on March 19, 1944 and began mass deportation of Jews to concentration camps shortly thereafter. Soros was 14 years old when the Soviet Army liberated Hungary on February 13, 1945.

Various nutty sources allege that Soros — who is Jewish — was actively involved in perpetrating the Holocaust. He has been falsely accused of a wide range of atrocities: being a Nazi; being in the SS; stealing his wealth from Holocaust victims. Glenn Beck accused Soros of collaborating with the Nazis as a teenager in Nazi-occupied Hungary, when he had been hidden with the Christian family of a government official at the ages of 13 to 14 to escape persecution.

Others who have falsely accused Soros of collaborating with the Nazis (or of being one) include:
 * (actor), who later apologized to Soros
 * Conservapedia
 * Ann Coulter
 * Dinesh D'Souza
 * Alex Jones
 * Donald Trump Jr.
 * (actor)

Blaming the victim is in fact a form of Holocaust denial. Soros was a victim because he was a Jewish child in Nazi-occupied Hungary during a period of active deportations to concentration camps.

Soros was asked about his experience in Nazi-occupied Hungary in a 1998 interview with on 60 Minutes:

Reputable media sources are united in saying that the allegations about Soros's Nazi past are false. Even the very right-wing National Review, which has called Soros a "genuinely nasty guy", has dismissed the allegations and said they are part of a wider problem many on the right have with telling the truth.