With political violence reaching crisis levels across America—including two assassination attempts against President Trump—conservatives are demanding the new administration use every tool available to cut off funding to the radical groups orchestrating the chaos.
The solution may be simpler than many realize: strip these violent organizations of their tax-exempt nonprofit status.
Political violence has exploded under the Biden regime, with targeted harassment, assassination attempts, and violent disruptions becoming the new normal. A shocking majority of Americans now believe a political candidate will be assassinated within the next five years—a damning indictment of how far our nation has fallen.
But here's what the mainstream media won't tell you: many of these radical groups rely heavily on their nonprofit status to operate. Revoking that status would gut their ability to organize intimidation campaigns and fund street violence.
As one social media user pointed out: "Radical groups rely on nonprofit status to operate. Revoking it would disrupt their ability to organize intimidation campaigns."
The irony isn't lost on patriots watching this unfold. "Oh, the Democrats using the IRS to target political opponents? But I thought it was TRUMP who was weaponizing the government?!" noted one observer, highlighting the left's hypocrisy.
Another user made the connection crystal clear: "Obama weaponized it against his political opponents and never paid a price. People will screech about this, but Antifa not getting pallets of bricks to throw is a good thing."
Time to Turn the Tables
For too long, We the People have watched as violent leftist groups enjoy tax-exempt status while terrorizing American cities and targeting conservative leaders. They've had their fun under the protection of the Biden regime.
Now, with Trump back in the White House and a mandate from the American people, it's time to use the system against those who've weaponized it against us. If these groups want to engage in political violence, they can do it without taxpayer subsidies.
The question isn't whether the Trump administration should act—it's whether they'll act fast enough to prevent the next assassination attempt.
