Is China funding the Democratic Socialist wave in US politics?

Beware: The Chinese Communist Party is plainly exploiting the opaque ownership structure of multinational tech companies to fund far-left political subversion across America.
Shanghai-based Maoist tech millionaire Neville Roy Singham is a notorious funder of outfits like the crypto-communist People’s Forum, which organizes radical protest-riots in support of Hamas terrorism and protecting the butchers who control Iran; his wife co-leads extremist Code Pink while his niece is a big player in the Democratic Socialists of America and a prominent adviser to Mayor Zohran Mamdani.
The Singhams got crazy-rich in the tech industry, but you have to wonder if Beijing staged their success to “wash” a vast fortune that could then undermine the United States, the chief barrier to CCP world domination.
The State Department has identified the Singham network as a tool of Chinese propaganda and influence operations, and it looks like it’s not unique.
The new “antizionist” American Priorities supported nearly all the recent Democratic primary wins of far-left House candidates — and the PAC gets much of its cash from techies made rich by Beijing-favored mobile-ad and data company AppLovin, as Liel Liebovitz reports at Tablet.
AppLovin’s incredible success is itself a mystery, with reported revenues involving murky cash flows among “independent” entities whose legitimacy seems questionable, as well as possible click-farm deceptions.
And the company tried to sell itself in 2016 to a state-backed Chinese private equity firm, but the feds blocked the deal on national-security grounds.
One of its largest individual shareholders is Hao Tang, a Chinese national with reported CCP ties who allegedly exercises secret control of the firm via offshore shell companies.
Tang is such a questionable character that JPMorgan Chase shut down its lucrative banking relationship with him in February over concerns regarding his business practices.
American Priorities spent millions of dollars in the recent primary cycle to elect rabid anti-American candidates like Darializa Avila Chevalier, who doesn’t believe in borders and thinks putting murderers in prison is a bad idea, and most of that money came from former AppLovin execs Omer Hasan, Mohammad Waqas Javed and Tariq Afaq Ahmed.
No, we see no evidence that these techies, with their sudden interest in donating millions of dollars to far-left candidates, are simply doing Beijing’s bidding.
But China’s pattern of interference in America politics is well-documented.
The New York Times reported just last week that China, Russia and Iran are all pushing hysteria to create “grassroots” opposition to new US data centers in a strategic effort to slow the pace of American innovation.
Alleged operatives for Beijing have achieved influence over Gov. Kathy Hochul and her predecessor, as well as with then-Mayor Eric Adams advisers; Albany-funded, China-linked nonprofits seem to have interfered in our elections.
In California, Chinese influence ops have hit politicians from the late Sen. Diane Feinstein to Rep. Eric Swalwell.
Liberals typically write off concerns about foreign subversion of US politics as McCarthyism, but if China is indeed funding the DSA takeover of the Democratic Party, the party’s mainstream needs to wake up before it’s too late.