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Indivisible activists have gone so far as to show up at the homes of Republican congressmen. In one case, so many protesters mobbed the home of Rep. Jason Lewis, R-Minn., that neighbors had to call police. They’ve also shown up at the homes of Rep. John Fason, R-N.Y., and Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif.

Fox News reported: “The targets say the whole operation is part of a one-two punch orchestrated from the top, in which left-wing groups throw their first punch by rounding up activists and training them to be as disruptive as possible during representatives’ town halls. Then, when lawmakers stop holding those events, the groups throw their second punch by protesting at their homes.”

Rep. Lewis said, “This is a well-oiled, very much activist plan to disrupt the democratic process.”

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Indivisible began with a Google document created after Trump won the 2016 election. It was titled, “Indivisible: A Practical Guide for Resisting the Trump Agenda” and was published with the goal to “stop a petty tyrant named Trump.”

After it was posted, actor George Takei, of “Star Trek” fame, tweeted it to 2.2 million followers. So did former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, who worked for former President Bill Clinton.

Ezra Levin, who thought up the guide, is now president of the nonprofit Indivisible Guide. Ezra’s wife, and the co-founder of Indivisible Guide, is Leah Greenberg. They’re both former congressional staffers.

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After Indivisible members swarmed his office and knocked unconscious his district director, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher, R-Calif., called them “enemies of American self-government and democracy.” In the midst of the mayhem, a 2-year-old girl was reportedly hit by a swinging door.

“Though the protesters think of themselves as idealists, they engage in political thuggery, pure and simple,” he wrote in a statement posted to Facebook. “These people do not want, as they’ve claimed, to hold a town hall meeting with me. These are unruly activists on whom the lessons of civility and democratic participation have been lost. They have repeatedly disrupted the normal operations of my district office, preventing my staff from serving constituents with real needs, such as veterans’ and social security issues. They are part of a nationwide, anti-Trump mobilization, whose organizers call themselves, with supreme hypocrisy, by the name ‘Indivisible.’

“In fact, they are bent on dividing the nation, defying the will of the voters and undermining the legitimacy of the election. These holier-than-thou obstructionists will be held responsible for this outrageous assault. They are exposing themselves for what they are – enemies of American self-government and democracy.”

In June, Rep. David Schweikert, R-Ariz., sent out a fundraising letter warning of Indivisible’s tactics. It stated:

“Groups called ‘Resistance,’ ‘Stronger Together,’ ‘Indivisible,’ ‘We Are the People,’ and ‘We Feel the Bern’ are far left front groups determined to inflict the kind of violence that we have seen before,” Rep. Schweikert wrote. “These groups believe that even Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren are too moderate. They drive a radical social agenda and will stop at no turn to ‘clash with police,’ ‘incite violence,’ ‘light cars on fire,’ ‘incite mass arrests,’ and ‘use men, women, and children, and families to mass confusion.”

number-5 MoveOn.org

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MoveOn.org, a far left group funded by billionaire George Soros that claims it has 8 million members across America, was launched in 1998 with a campaign of opposition to the impeachment of President Bill Clinton and emerged as a fundraising vehicle for Democratic Party candidates. Today, it is focused on pushing the impeachment of Trump. That’s how far MoveOn.org has moved on in 19 years.

Before Inauguration Day, MoveOn.org held “community meeting(s) to resist Trump” across the U.S., along with the Working Family’s Party and People’s Action.

In August, Melissa Byrne, a leftist activist who has worked for MoveOn.org, Bernie Sanders’ campaign, Obama for America, SEIU, Ultraviolet and other progressive organizations, said she was detained by the Secret Service after she entered a secure area on the second floor of Trump Tower on Aug. 15. She smuggled a 10-foot banner under her dress and unfurled it. It read: “Women Resist White Supremacy.” Byrne claimed she was handcuffed and questioned by Secret Service and NYPD officers for an hour. She also claims Secret Service agents questioned her neighbors. However, Byrne didn’t reveal why Secret Service agents and NYPD officers might have considered her a threat.

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MoveOn.org organized a protest at the White House on July 11, where it accused President Trump and his campaign of colluding with Russia. The organization has collected more than 530,000 signatures on a petition calling for the U.S. House to investigate Trump’s “financial conflicts of interest and ties to the Russian government.”

Also in August, MoveOn.org promoted “Resistance Recess,” a campaign featuring “over 200 actions planned in 43 states … [in] opposition to Trump’s toxic agenda.”

As WND reported Aug. 21, MoveOn.org held an “emergency mass organizing call” to censure President Trump and provide special training concerning white nationalism. How do MoveOn.org and other social-justice warriors on the call plan to fight white nationalism?

“Our work here is to the difficult work of standing against white supremacy – in every single one of its forms,” Mehrdad Azemun, campaign director of People’s Action, said on the MoveOn call. “By opposing hate groups, by taking down racist monuments, by opposing hate speech and by routing out and reversing laws that are based on ideas of white supremacy, which we know can show up in so many different forms.”

He congratulated the “progressive” movement for expanding and successfully obstructing the Trump presidency.

“Of course we are concerned about Trump, of course we are concerned about his endorsement of white supremacists,” he said, despite the fact that Trump has never endorsed any white supremacists, but, rather, has repeatedly condemned them. “But remember, he is a failed leader, less relevant than ever and abandoned by so many people this week – CEOs, fellow Republicans – he’s played a massive game of subtraction. On our end, we keep adding, the folks who stand on the side of love, we keep winning, and we keep growing.”

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MoveOn is working to build 2018 election momentum, mobilizing activists across America through local organizing, town-hall meetings and door-to-door visits.

“Trump is a direct attack on some core American values of fairness, equality, of treating each other with kindness,” Victoria Kaplan, organizing director at MoveOn.org, told CNN. “It has really unified people.”

In March 2016, the Washington Times reported that MoveOn.org had been “conducting fundraising activities from the Chicago protests against Donald Trump.” In a fundraising email, MoveOn.org vowed to continue its anti-Trump campaigns: “We’ll support MoveOn.org members to call out and nonviolently protest Trump’s racist, bigoted, misogynistic, xenophobic, and violent behavior – and show the world that America rejects trump’s hate. And to keep it going, we’re counting on you to donate whatever you can to cover the costs of everything involved – the organizers, signs, online recruitment ads, training, and more.”

Also in March 2016, Roger Stone, a friend of President Trump, claimed MoveOn.org helped organize a protest against Trump at Trump Tower, “Infiltrating the crowd, I learned most were from MoveOn or the Occupy movement,” Stone wrote in the Daily Caller. “Soap was definitely in short supply in this crowd. Several admitted answering a Craig’s List ad paying $16.00 an hour for protesters.”


"The time for war has not yet come, but it will come and that soon, and when it does come, my advice is to draw the sword and throw away the scabbard." Gen. T.J. Jackson, March 1861