- Nonprofit empire: Claims nonprofit organizations control $14.1 trillion in assets, exceeding major national economies and the federal budget.
- Invisible power: Argues nonprofits act as a fourth branch of government with no elections, confirmations, or accountability mechanisms.
- Arabella network: Details Arabella Advisors and affiliated funds allegedly funneling dark money to progressive causes and vanishing organizational fingerprints.
- Open borders industry: States faith-based NGOs allegedly funded largely by taxpayers that lobby for looser immigration policies.
- Summer of fire: Notes 2020 unrest costs, BLM fundraising, and large foundation grants to build permanent political infrastructure.
- Green funding grift: Describes $27 billion in EPA green grants overseen by a nonprofit veteran, including billions to nascent organizations.
- Election infrastructure: Claims Zuckerberg-funded nonprofits favored Democratic areas and that legal groups supported by foundations challenge election-security laws.
- Reform agenda: Calls for transparency, lobbying bans, stricter FARA enforcement, sunset tax exemptions, and limits on sue-and-settle settlements.
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The Fourth Branch: $14.1 Trillion. Zero Votes. How America Lost Its Republic to an Unelected Empire.
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I love this country.
I love it the way you love something you're terrified of losing with eyes wide open, hands trembling, and a heart full of both gratitude and grief. I love it the way every American loves it who has ever watched their child recite the Pledge of Allegiance and felt their throat tighten with pride. I love it the way I love Fourth of July and fireworks and hot dogs and apple pie.
And I'm writing this because I believe we are losing it.
Not to a foreign enemy. Not to a political party. But to a structure of power that the Constitution never anticipated, that "We the People" never approved, and that operates in plain sight while remaining almost entirely invisible.
I'm talking about the Fourth Branch of government: the one you were never taught about in civics class. The one that doesn't appear in any founding document. The one that now controls more wealth than most nations on Earth.
According to the Federal Reserve's own data, nonprofit organizations in the United States now control $14.1 trillion in total assets.
Let that number wash over you.
$14.1 trillion.
That's $4.0 trillion in real estate. $3.1 trillion in corporate equities. And here's the part that should make your blood run cold: $3.6 trillion in assets that the Federal Reserve doesn't even categorize. Three-point-six trillion dollars in something, and nobody is required to tell you what.
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This nonprofit empire is larger than the combined GDP of Japan, Germany, and India. It exceeds the entire federal budget. It has grown from under $2 trillion in the 1990s to a force that now rivals nation-states.
And not one penny of it answers to a single American voter.
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THE ARCHITECTURE OF INVISIBILITY
The genius of this system is its invisibility. When you think of power in America, you think of the White House, Congress, the Supreme Court. You think of elections and votes and the peaceful transfer of authority that has defined our republic for nearly 250 years.
But while you were watching C-SPAN, a parallel structure was being built. A structure that writes the laws our legislators pass. That sues federal agencies into submission. That funds the election offices that count your votes. That trains the journalists who shape your perception of reality. That organizes the protests that fill your streets. That staffs the government agencies that regulate your life.
This structure has a name. We call it the "nonprofit sector." We treat it as charity. We subsidize it with tax exemptions. We celebrate it as civil society.
But what it has become is something else entirely: an unaccountable apparatus of political power that operates outside the constitutional framework the Founders so carefully designed.
The Founders understood something profound about human nature: power corrupts. That's why they built accountability into every branch of government. The President faces the voters every four years. Members of Congress face them every two or six. Even federal judges, appointed for life, must first survive Senate confirmation: a public vetting by elected representatives.
But the $14.1 trillion nonprofit infrastructure faces nothing.
No elections. No confirmation hearings. No term limits. No recall mechanisms. No impeachment proceedings. Just permanent, perpetual, unaccountable power.
THE LEFT PERFECTED THIS MACHINE
Let me be direct about something: while both sides of the political spectrum use nonprofit organizations, the progressive left has built this into an art form. They have constructed a permanent infrastructure designed to win policy battles they cannot win at the ballot box.
Consider the Arabella Advisors network.
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If you've never heard of Arabella Advisors, that's by design. This single consulting firm manages a constellation of nonprofits that function as a dark money ATM for progressive causes. The Sixteen Thirty Fund, one of Arabella's flagship organizations, spent $410 million in 2020, more than the Democratic National Committee itself.
The network includes the New Venture Fund ($959 million in revenue), the Hopewell Fund, the Windward Fund, and the North Fund. Together, they form a financial architecture of stunning sophistication.
Here's how it works: Organizations can pop up under Arabella's fiscal sponsorship, spend tens of millions of dollars on political causes, and then disappear without ever filing their own tax returns. The money flows through. The fingerprints vanish. It's organizational money laundering with a 501(c)(3) stamp of approval.
And the scale is breathtaking.
After a decade spent attacking undisclosed political spending by conservatives, the progressive left embraced dark money with what the New York Times called "fresh zeal." In the 2020 election cycle, left-leaning dark money groups outspent their right-leaning counterparts by nearly two to one, pouring more than $1.5 billion in undisclosed cash into American politics.
By 2024, total dark money in elections hit $1.9 billion, a record. The Brennan Center for Justice, itself a nonprofit that shapes the very narrative around money in politics, documented this explosion while advocating for rules that would primarily constrain their opponents.
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This is not hypocrisy. It's strategy. Build the infrastructure. Capture the referees. Write the rules. Win.
But Arabella is just the architecture. Now let's look at the operations.
THE OPEN BORDERS INDUSTRY
Nowhere is the NGO-government merger more complete than at the southern border.
The organizations facilitating mass migration into the United States present themselves as faith-based charities: Catholic Charities, Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service (now rebranded as "Global Refuge"), the Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society (HIAS), Church World Service. The names evoke images of nuns ladling soup and pastors offering prayers.
The reality is an industrial operation funded almost entirely by American taxpayers.
Consider the numbers from fiscal year 2024:
Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service received over $340 million from the federal government. According to their own tax filings, they receive 95 percent of their funding from government sources.
Church World Service received over $315 million from the Departments of State, Health and Human Services, and Homeland Security. Government grants constitute 85 percent of their budget.
HIAS received $113 million in federal funds, 65 percent of their total revenue.
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These are not charities in any meaningful sense. They are government contractors wearing clerical collars.
And here's the part that should enrage you: these same organizations use their non-government funds to lobby for more permissive immigration policies, policies that will increase the flow of migrants and, consequently, increase their future government contracts.
You are paying them to resettle migrants. And you are paying them to lobby for policies that will ensure they resettle more migrants. You are funding both sides of a policy debate in which you have no voice.
When Texas or Arizona attempts to enforce border security, these "charities" fund the lawsuits to stop them. When states pass legislation to crack down on illegal immigration, these organizations deploy their legal teams to block implementation.
The Heritage Foundation has called it a "corrupt money-changing circle" in which taxpayers fund "migration weaponization used against America's interests."
They're not wrong.
THE SUMMER OF FIRE: 2020
In the summer of 2020, American cities burned.
Following the death of George Floyd, protests erupted in 140 cities across the nation. Many were peaceful. But the riots, looting, and arson that accompanied them produced something unprecedented: the most expensive civil unrest in American insurance history.
According to Property Claim Services, which has tracked insurance claims related to civil disorder since 1950, the destruction caused between $1 billion and $2 billion in insured losses. That figure eclipsed the previous record (the 1992 Los Angeles riots following the Rodney King verdict) by a substantial margin, even adjusted for inflation.
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The 1992 riots cost insurers $775 million, or about $1.4 billion in today's dollars. The 2020 riots exceeded that in raw numbers and matched or surpassed it in real terms.
But here's what makes 2020 different: it was the first civil disorder catastrophe in American history to affect more than one state. The damage spread across 20 states, shattering the previous model of localized urban unrest.
Dozens of people were killed. Thousands of businesses (many of them minority-owned) were looted, torched, or vandalized. Communities that had struggled for decades to build wealth watched it go up in flames.
And what happened to the money that poured in to support "the movement"?
Black Lives Matter Global Network Foundation raised approximately $90 million in 2020. Co-founder Patrisse Cullors purchased a $1.4 million home in a predominantly white Los Angeles neighborhood. The organization acquired a $6 million mansion in Southern California, ostensibly for "influencer housing."
When donors and even local BLM chapters demanded financial transparency, the organization went dark. State attorneys general in California, Washington, and elsewhere opened investigations for failure to file proper nonprofit disclosures.
This is what a $90 million "movement" looks like when there's no accountability.
But the real money came from elsewhere.
The Ford Foundation (one of the largest philanthropies in America, with $16 billion in assets) announced it would lead a six-year effort to raise $100 million for the Movement for Black Lives. The foundation's announcement spoke of wanting to "nurture bold experiments" and help the movement "build the solid infrastructure that will enable it to flourish."
George Soros's Open Society Foundations went further. In July 2020, as cities smoldered, Open Society announced $220 million in new funding for organizations aligned with the movement. Foundation president Patrick Gaspard (a former Obama administration official) declared it "inspiring and powerful to experience this transformational moment."
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The foundation was explicit about its goals: "We want to nurture bold experiments and help the movement build the solid infrastructure that will enable it to flourish."
Infrastructure. That word keeps appearing. Not charity. Not relief. Not healing. Infrastructure. The permanent architecture of political power.
THE GREEN NEW DEAL GRIFT
If you want to understand how the NGO-government merger actually functions, look no further than the Biden administration's distribution of climate funds.
Congressional testimony from 2025 laid bare the machinery.
The Inflation Reduction Act set aside hundreds of billions of dollars for green initiatives. The Environmental Protection Agency received tens of billions to distribute as grants. And a staffer named Jahi Wise, who came to the EPA from an environmental nonprofit called The Coalition for Green Capital, was placed in charge of directing $27 billion in green funding.
Pause on that number. That's more than the combined budgets of the Departments of Treasury, Interior, and Commerce, controlled by an unconfirmed staffer who faced no Senate confirmation and received no Congressional oversight.
And what happened?
Under his tenure, $5 billion was granted to his former organization, The Coalition for Green Capital.
Power Forward Communities (an organization that was only a few months old when it applied) received nearly $9 billion to distribute at its own discretion.
One recipient was an organization affiliated with Stacey Abrams, the two-time Georgia gubernatorial candidate. According to testimony, this organization had approximately $100 in the bank when it received $2 billion in federal grants.
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One hundred dollars. Two billion dollars.
This is not government. This is not charity. This is a machine for converting taxpayer money into political infrastructure, operating beyond the reach of democratic accountability.
THE ELECTION INFRASTRUCTURE TAKEOVER
In 2020, Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan donated $419 million to American election administration through two nonprofits: the Center for Tech and Civic Life (CTCL) and the Center for Election Innovation and Research.
The money went to local election offices to help them manage the unprecedented challenges of conducting an election during a pandemic. That was the stated purpose.
The reality was more targeted.
In Wisconsin, a battleground state decided by roughly 20,000 votes, CTCL funding to the five largest cities (all Democratic strongholds) worked out to $38.17 per voter. Rural areas, which lean Republican, received as little as $0.00 per voter.
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The money funded ballot drop box installations, poll worker recruitment and training, voter outreach programs, and election office operations, all selectively distributed to jurisdictions that favored one party.
At least 24 states have since passed laws banning or restricting private funding of election administration. But they did so after 2020, after the money had already flowed, after the infrastructure had already been built.
Meanwhile, a network of well-funded legal organizations exists specifically to challenge any law that tightens election security. The ACLU. The Brennan Center. The NAACP Legal Defense Fund. Marc Elias's Democracy Docket.
They call voter ID laws "suppression." They call signature matching requirements "disenfranchisement." They call citizenship verification "discrimination."
And they have unlimited resources to sue, and sue, and sue again, funded by the same foundation complex that shapes every other aspect of this infrastructure.
The Brennan Center for Justice has become the go-to "expert" source for virtually every mainstream media story about voting rights. They produce the studies. They train the journalists. They file the lawsuits. They write the talking points.
It's a closed loop. A self-reinforcing system. An infrastructure of influence that operates in plain sight while remaining almost entirely invisible.
THE MEDIA-NGO PIPELINE
You cannot understand American media without understanding its nonprofit funding.
ProPublica, the investigative journalism outfit whose work shapes national narratives, operates on a $45 million annual budget funded primarily by the Sandler Foundation and other progressive donors. Their investigations (invariably) advance progressive policy priorities.
The Marshall Project covers criminal justice with funding from progressive foundations. Every story, somehow, points toward decarceration and police reform.
NPR and PBS receive federal funding and major foundation support simultaneously. Their coverage reflects their funders' priorities with remarkable consistency.
The "fact-checking" infrastructure is even more compromised. The Poynter Institute runs the International Fact-Checking Network, which certifies fact-checkers used by social media platforms to police information. Poynter is funded by the Gates Foundation, Google, and the Open Society Foundations.
When progressive foundations fund the newsrooms AND the fact-checkers, who checks the checkers?
The answer is: no one. That's the point.
THE CONSTITUTIONAL VIOLATION
What I've described is not a conspiracy. It's not hidden. It operates in broad daylight, documented in tax filings and press releases and foundation annual reports.
But it represents something profound: the circumvention of the constitutional order.
The Founders designed a system in which power would be accountable to the people. They separated powers precisely because they understood that concentrated, unaccountable power (regardless of the intentions of those who wield it) inevitably becomes tyrannical.
James Madison wrote in Federalist No. 51: "If men were angels, no government would be necessary." The entire architecture of the Constitution rests on the assumption that power must be checked, balanced, and ultimately answerable to the sovereign people.
The $14.1 trillion nonprofit infrastructure answers to no one.
It writes model legislation that state legislators pass without reading. It sues federal agencies into adopting regulations that Congress never authorized. It funds the election offices that count your votes. It trains the journalists who shape your understanding of reality. It staffs the government agencies that regulate your daily life. It organizes the protests that pressure elected officials. It finances the lawsuits that block the laws those officials pass.
This is not democracy. This is not a republic. This is oligarchy wearing the mask of civil society.
And the defense (always) is that these organizations are doing good work. Fighting for justice. Advancing worthy causes.
But that defense misses the point entirely.
The question is not whether the causes are worthy. The question is whether unelected, unaccountable organizations should wield this kind of power in a constitutional republic, regardless of how righteous they believe themselves to be.
The answer, if we still believe in self-government, must be no.
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THE PATH BACK
The system I've described did not emerge overnight, and it will not be dismantled overnight. But if we still believe in the American experiment (if we still believe that government should derive its just powers from the consent of the governed) then we must begin.
First: Radical transparency. Every nonprofit with annual revenue above $1 million should be required to disclose every donor who gives more than $1,000, in real time. The donor-advised fund loophole (which allows unlimited anonymous giving through intermediaries) must be closed. Foreign funding of American nonprofits should be illegal without complete disclosure.
Second: End the funding-lobbying double-dip. Organizations that receive federal grants should be absolutely prohibited from lobbying the government that funds them. You can take taxpayer money or you can try to influence policy, but not both. Ever.
Third: Enforce the Foreign Agents Registration Act. FARA is toothless. Only about 5% of FARA registrants are nonprofits. The law must be expanded and aggressively enforced to ensure that American policy debates are not being shaped by foreign interests operating through domestic proxies.
Fourth: Sunset tax exemptions. Tax-exempt status should not be permanent. Every nonprofit should be required to reapply for 501(c)(3) status every ten years, with full audits and public disclosure. Organizations that have drifted from their charitable purposes into political activism should lose their subsidies.
Fifth: Close the sue-and-settle loophole. When advocacy organizations sue federal agencies and then "settle" for consent decrees that impose new regulations, they are legislating from outside the legislative process. These settlements should require Congressional approval, or they should be prohibited entirely.
None of this will be easy. The organizations that benefit from the current system have vast resources and powerful allies. They will fight every reform with every tool at their disposal.
But the alternative is to accept that American self-government is over. That "We the People" has become a pleasant fiction. That the real decisions will be made by those who control the $14.1 trillion, and the rest of us will simply live with the consequences.
A REPUBLIC, IF YOU CAN KEEP IT
When Benjamin Franklin emerged from the Constitutional Convention in 1787, a woman reportedly asked him what kind of government the delegates had created.
"A republic," Franklin replied, "if you can keep it."
That answer haunts me now.
The Founders gave us something precious: a system of self-government built on the radical premise that ordinary people could govern themselves. That power should flow from the bottom up, not the top down. That every American, regardless of wealth or status or connection, should have an equal voice in the decisions that shape their lives.
We have allowed that system to be hollowed out from within.
We have permitted an unelected, unaccountable infrastructure to grow so vast, so wealthy, so powerful that it now rivals the government itself. We have watched as constitutional processes were circumvented, as accountability was evaded, as power was concentrated in fewer and fewer hands.
And we have called it charity.
The $14.1 trillion question before us is simple: Do we still believe in self-government? Do we still believe that power should be accountable to the people? Do we still believe that the American experiment is worth preserving?
If the answer is yes, then the work begins now.
If the answer is no, then we should at least have the honesty to admit what we have lost.
I believe the answer is yes. I believe it because I know this country, not the country of cable news and Twitter wars, but the country of Little League games and church potlucks and neighbors helping neighbors after storms. I believe it because I've seen what Americans can do when they decide something matters.
The question is not whether we can reclaim our republic.
The question is whether we still have the will, and whether we'll find it before the $14.1 trillion finds a way to make the question irrelevant.
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