American Tycoon Ran CCP Propaganda Machine from Shanghai
Video footage reveals billionaire Neville Roy Singham's $591 million network coordinated with Chinese Communist Party officials to fund left-wing protests and wage cognitive warfare against American institutions.
In November 2025, Neville Roy Singham stood before Chinese officials in a Shanghai conference hall and rewrote World War II history. The American-born tech billionaire praised Xi Jinping, called the United States "fascist," and closed the event as attendees sang the communist anthem "The Internationale." That same day, his network sent text alerts across America: "Mobilize against ICE by 6 p.m."
Video footage obtained by Fox News Digital reveals Singham's direct ideological alignment with the Chinese Communist Party. "If we want a new world order based on multilateralism that President Xi and CPC and China have proposed, we have to undo the ideological damage done by the narrative of World War II," Singham told the Global South Academic Forum. The conference was administered by CCP officials.
Singham has built a $591 million network that moves funds through U.S. tax-exempt nonprofits to wage what national security experts call "cognitive warfare" against America. Federal investigators have traced 223 financial transactions across five continents from 2017 through 2025, flowing through five concentric rings of shell companies and nonprofits.
Goldman Sachs hosted Singham's anonymous donor-advised fund for years before terminating it in February 2024. Money flowed through shell companies with hotel and UPS Store addresses into six core U.S. nonprofits. The network expanded to approximately 2,000 organizations worldwide.
The network sprang from a 2017 "Revolutionary Love" wedding in Jamaica where Singham married CodePink co-founder Jodie Evans. Approximately 80 activists attended, including actor Danny Glover, playwright Eve Ensler, Medea Benjamin, and Ben Cohen of Ben & Jerry's. At least 18 wedding guests now hold leadership positions across 15 core organizations.
Three U.S. Singham nonprofits sent $9.1 million in seven payments to Shanghai Maku Cultural Communications Co. Ltd., a CCP-aligned content firm operating from the same luxury Shanghai building as Singham's own operation. The payments prove content coordination beyond mere funding.
This network operates as a rapid-response protest machine. People's Forum, CodePink, the Party for Socialism and Liberation, and the ANSWER Coalition have organized at least 300 protests over the past decade, mobilizing within hours of news events. They followed protests against the January 2025 arrest of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, anti-Iran war rallies, and pro-Cuba demonstrations.
"This is not grassroots protest," said Adam Sohn, co-founder of the Network Contagion Research Institute. "It is a repeatable system for paralyzing American infrastructure on demand, financed through U.S. tax law, and aligned with a hostile foreign power."
The State Department designated People's Forum and CodePink as CCP threat vectors in a February 2026 report to Congress. House Ways and Means Committee and House Oversight Committee have open investigations into Singham and his organizations.
The White House created a new "Director of Cognitive Advantage" position on the National Security Council to counter information warfare. Shawn Chenoweth holds the post, which aims to shore up America's defenses against foreign manipulation.
The network's transnational reach extends beyond U.S. borders. Indian authorities investigated NewsClick after tracing $10.5 million in funding from Singham's Justice and Education Fund. Delhi Police charged Singham with being the "ultimate paymaster" behind pro-China election interference and issued him a criminal summons in January 2026.
"Neville Roy Singham and his wife, Jody Evans, are bringing into the 21st century Mao's dream for a People's War," said Xi Van Fleet, author of "Made in America" and a survivor of Mao's Cultural Revolution.
The network exploits American democratic systems to advance foreign interests. People's Forum received over $20 million from Singham's network. CodePink received $1.8 million, with $1.3 million coming directly from Singham.
House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer, R-Ky., described the operation as "an elaborate dark money network" that allows Singham "to send funds to a series of non-profits that have almost no real footprints."
For a decade, Americans witnessed what appeared to be spontaneous left-wing protests against ICE, war, and inequality. They were unaware these demonstrations were orchestrated by a $591 million network secretly directed from Shanghai, funded through U.S. tax-exempt nonprofits, and aligned with the Chinese Communist Party's strategic goal of undermining American institutions.