
FOLLOW THE MONEY PART IV China’s American Mao: Inside Singham’s blueprint to “wage war” for a “new world order”
FOLLOW THE MONEY PART IV
China’s American Mao: Inside Singham’s blueprint to “wage war” for a “new world order”
By FactsFirstUS.com Investigative Unit. Staff Writer
March 31, 2026
Editor’s Note
Before you read another word, pause for a moment.
Because what you are about to step into is not just Part IV of a series. It is the point where the pieces stop looking separate… and start locking together.
In Part I, we exposed the illusion of “spontaneous protest,” revealing how demonstrations that appear organic are often funded, organized, and strategically deployed.
👉 Read Part I:
https://factsfirstus.com/post/follow-the-money-part-1-paid-protests
In Part II, we peeled back another layer, uncovering what we called The Protest Machine… a coordinated ecosystem of organizations, messaging pipelines, and funding channels designed to mobilize crowds on demand.
👉 Read Part II:
https://factsfirstus.com/post/follow-the-money-part-ii-the-protest-machine
In Part III, we answered the question many Americans have quietly asked themselves: How do these movements appear overnight? We examined the infrastructure, the timing, and the narrative shaping that makes it all possible.
👉 Read Part III:
https://factsfirstus.com/post/follow-the-money-part-iii-what-shapes-the-protests-you-see-and-why-they-seem-to-appear-overnight*
Now… Part IV.
This is where the money meets the ideology.
Where the strategy becomes visible.
Where the story stops being domestic… and turns global.
Much of the investigative groundwork for this reporting draws from the work of Asra Q. Nomani, a seasoned investigative journalist and private investigator. A former Wall Street Journal reporter and senior investigative editor at Fox News Digital, Nomani has spent decades examining the intersection of money, politics, and influence. She is the founder of the Pearl Project, a nonprofit dedicated to journalism in the public interest and the defense of press freedom. Her work has appeared across major national and international outlets including CNN, BBC, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and Fox News, where she is known for rigorous analysis and fearless reporting. Her investigations have focused heavily on financial networks, influence operations, and political funding structures.
What she uncovered… and what we expand on here… demands attention.
Because this is no longer just about protests.
This is about power.
PART IV
It did not happen in Washington.
It did not happen in New York.
It happened in Shanghai.
Inside a conference hall endorsed by the Chinese Communist Party, an American businessman stood before a room of global activists, academics, and ideological allies.
In his hands was a 172-page blueprint.
Not a speech.
Not a theory.
A roadmap.
Neville Roy Singham, a tech billionaire who made his fortune in the United States, delivered a message that reframed history, redefined conflict, and laid out a vision for what he called a new world order.
“If we want… a new world order… we have to undo the ideological damage.”
Neville Roy Singham, remarks at Global South Academic Forum
The room applauded.
And in that moment, something became clear.
This was not just rhetoric.
This was strategy.
According to Singham’s own writings, the great wars of the past did not actually end. They evolved.
“The war never strategically ended. It simply changed form.”
Neville Roy Singham, written report
No longer fought with tanks or missiles, this new conflict plays out through narratives, institutions, and influence.
Information replaces artillery.
Messaging replaces firepower.
At the center of this worldview is a radical reinterpretation of history itself.
Singham rejects the traditional understanding of World War II. He argues that the West, particularly the United States, did not “save” the world from fascism, but instead constructed a false narrative to justify global dominance.
“This was not their war. It was their profit.”
Neville Roy Singham, written analysis
From this perspective, the current global order is not legitimate. It is manufactured.
And if it is manufactured… it can be dismantled.
One idea appears again and again in Singham’s writings.
Control the story… and you control reality.
He describes what he calls an “ideological apparatus” built on two essential components: money and method.
Money funds the system.
Method spreads the message.
Media platforms.
Educational programs.
Activist networks.
Cultural campaigns.
All working together.
“The ideological apparatus requires both money and methods… institutions, media, education and organizing structures.”
Neville Roy Singham, strategic framework
This is where everything begins to connect.
Because this is exactly what Parts I, II, and III exposed.
Not random protests.
Not isolated movements.
A system.
The scale is staggering.
Investigations reveal a network spanning roughly 2,000 organizations worldwide, connected through funding channels that move hundreds of millions of dollars across continents.
One nonprofit alone distributed over $108 million globally, funding dozens of groups engaged in organizing, media production, and ideological training.
Another funneled approximately $96 million from the United States into regions across South America, Africa, Europe, and beyond.
The paper trail shows money moving in loops.
Organizations funding each other.
Resources cycling through interconnected entities.
Transparency becomes difficult.
Accountability becomes nearly impossible.
And yet, on the surface, these groups often appear independent.
Grassroots.
Local.
Authentic.
This is not accidental.
It is rooted in ideology that dates back decades.
“Without the united front, the revolutionary cause cannot succeed.”
Mao Zedong
That concept has been modernized, globalized, and scaled.
Today, it appears in the form of what Singham describes as an International Revolutionary Front.
A cross-border alliance of activists, academics, nonprofits, and media organizations.
Connected by shared messaging.
Aligned in purpose.
Funded through a complex financial web.
Operating not within one country… but across many.
If you have seen protest signs using the word “fascism” repeatedly…
If you have noticed coordinated messaging across different cities…
If you have wondered why certain narratives appear everywhere at once…
This is part of the explanation.
Language is not random.
It is cultivated.
Repeated.
Reinforced.
Distributed.
And according to this framework, it serves a purpose.
To redefine the conflict.
To reshape perception.
To mobilize people.
What began years ago as a loose collection of organizations has evolved into something far more structured.
A system that funds activism.
Shapes narratives.
Builds alliances.
Moves resources globally.
It operates in cycles.
Money fuels organizations.
Organizations produce messaging.
Messaging drives activism.
Activism reinforces the narrative.
And the cycle continues.
“The current global system… is the product of betrayal… covered with propaganda.”
Neville Roy Singham, written report
But here is the question that must be asked.
If one system is propaganda…
What replaces it?
This is no longer just about one man.
One network.
One ideology.
It is about a broader shift in how influence operates in the modern world.
Not through direct control.
But through coordination.
Not through force.
But through narrative.
Not through visibility.
But through structure.
And when that structure reaches across borders…
Across institutions…
Across movements…
It becomes something much larger than it first appears.
This is no longer theoretical.
It is operational.
If Part IV reveals the blueprint…
Part V will expose the scale.
Because behind what appears to be a grassroots movement lies something far bigger.
A network of approximately 500 organizations generating nearly $3 billion in combined revenue, connected to protests like #NoKings and broader calls for systemic upheaval.
Who are they?
How are they connected?
And what does it mean for the future?
That is where this story is headed next.
This is Part IV of a five-part investigative series.
Sources and References
Fox News Digital investigative reporting on Neville Roy Singham network
IRS nonprofit filings and publicly available financial disclosures
Capital Research Center analysis on nonprofit funding networks
Public statements and conference materials from Global South Academic Forum
Tricontinental Institute publications and affiliated materials

