Hasan Piker may have accidentally done something remarkable this week: he said the quiet part out loud. During a recent livestream, the far-left commentator openly admitted that billionaire Marxist Neville Roy Singham has been operating as a “funding vehicle” for political movements inside the United States. Conservatives have been warning about this exact kind of foreign-aligned influence operation for years, and now one of the Left’s loudest internet personalities just casually confirmed it on camera like he was discussing weekend brunch plans.
That admission immediately caught the attention of Fox News Digital investigations editor Asra Nomani, who pointed out the significance of Piker’s wording. Not “charity.” Not “philanthropy.” Political movements.
That distinction matters.
According to Nomani’s reporting, Singham has pumped roughly $285 million since 2017 into pro-communist nonprofits tied to activist causes, including Code Pink, the radical activist organization now reportedly facing Treasury Department scrutiny over potential sanctions issues involving Communist Cuba.
Piker himself participated in a Cuba convoy organized by nonprofits allegedly linked to Singham’s funding network. During the broadcast, Piker attempted to portray the investigations into these activities as political persecution, claiming officials are really targeting Singham because of his activism and influence.
“He’s been a funding vehicle for a lot of political movements in the country, a lot of activism,” Piker said.
Well, that certainly clears things up.
For years, Americans have been told that concerns over communist influence, dark money activism, and foreign-backed ideological networks were somehow “conspiracy theories.” Meanwhile, an ultra-wealthy American Marxist relocates to Communist China, reportedly funnels hundreds of millions into activist organizations, and those groups just coincidentally happen to push anti-American messaging, anti-police protests, anti-border enforcement activism, and pro-Cuba propaganda. Totally normal stuff. Nothing suspicious there at all.
Singham, who reportedly sold his software company for hundreds of millions before moving to Shanghai, has long been connected to radical activist organizations through both direct and indirect funding channels. He also married Code Pink co-founder Jodie Evans, which critics argue helped transform the organization into what many conservatives view as a megaphone for Chinese Communist Party narratives.
The concerns are no longer isolated to conservative media either. House Oversight Chair James Comer, Rep. Anna Paulina Luna, and Sen. Tom Cotton have all reportedly pushed for investigations into Singham’s network and called for stronger scrutiny of potential foreign influence operations.
Meanwhile, Treasury Department investigators have reportedly issued subpoenas to Code Pink co-founder Medea Benjamin and Hasan Piker regarding the “Nuestra América Convoy” to Cuba. That convoy delivered aid and resources to the Cuban regime while seemingly avoiding discussion of Cuba’s long record of political repression, censorship, and lack of free elections. Funny how human rights concerns suddenly disappear whenever hard-left regimes are involved.
The convoy arrived in Havana earlier this year and was greeted by Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel himself. Organizers reportedly included Progressive International and other anti-capitalist organizations with histories of promoting socialist and revolutionary movements.
Piker likely thought he was defending a friend during his livestream. Instead, he may have handed critics the clearest public admission yet that wealthy ideological operatives are using nonprofit networks as political weapons inside the United States.

Leave a Comment