In a bombshell NY Post revelation that reads like a Cold War spy thriller, this reporter has uncovered a web of Marxist operatives burrowed deep within the hallowed halls of Columbia University. At the center of this red web? None other than Neville "Roy" Singham, the notorious Shanghai-based millionaire with a penchant for anti-American propaganda.Singham, who cashed out his software company ThoughtWorks for a cool $785 million in 2017, has been bankrolling a network of far-left organizations that have their tentacles wrapped around the Big Apple.
But it's his infiltration of Columbia that should set off alarm bells from Morningside Heights to Langley. The epicenter of this communist cabal is the innocuous-sounding Kairos Center for Religions, Rights, and Social Justice, nestled within Union Theological Seminary - Columbia's divinity school affiliate. But don't let the academic veneer fool you. This is no mere study group - it's a veritable red army in waiting.
NY Post investigation has revealed that a staggering 9 out of 14 Kairos staff members have direct ties to Singham or his web of organizations
These aren't just casual connections - we're talking about deep, ideological commitments that would make Lenin blush.Take Rev. Liz Theoharis, Kairos' executive director. She's not just leading prayers - she's leading political discussions at Singham's wedding and penning screeds against American efforts to secure vital tech supply chains from China 1
.Or consider Chris Caruso, Kairos' operations director and - surprise, surprise - a board member of Singham's People's Forum. Caruso's not just pushing papers - he's pulling in a cool $72,800 salary from another Singham front, the Justice & Education Fund1
The list goes on. From CODEPINK alums to self-proclaimed "gravediggers of capitalism," Singham's soldiers are entrenched and ready for action1
.Senator Marco Rubio, who's been sounding the alarm on Singham's activities, didn't mince words: "We must stop this infiltration of our education system."1
As the dust settles from the recent campus unrest, one thing is clear: the foxes aren't just in the henhouse - they're teaching the class.