Tony Seruga@TonySeruga
🚨 EXPOSED: ACLU Power Lawyer Cecillia Wang—The Globalist Enforcer Using ‘Civil Rights’ to Dismantle American Sovereignty
ACLU Director Cecillia Wang, who is arguing for birthright citizenship, has a very cozy relationship with the Open Society Foundations (OSF) – founded by George Soros, a key financier of internationalist causes, including mass migration policy advocacy and identity politics. OSF funds ACLU programs and complementary NGOs such as Human Rights Watch, Brennan Center, and the National Immigration Law Center (NILC), with which Wang has collaborated.
Ford Foundation – major historical ACLU backer that shifted significantly leftward after the 1960s. Supports “racial equity,” CRT‐aligned education, and “equity-based democracy initiatives.”
Tides Foundation – dark-money clearinghouse for progressive and socialist advocacy. Tides has spun off or fiscal-sponsored intersectional projects Wang has publicly supported.
Sandler Foundation / Justice Catalyst – known to funnel funds to lawfare networks advancing anti-deportation campaigns and ideological litigation against law enforcement.
While these are not “foreign” powers in the narrow sense, they are ideologically globalist — promoting transnational governance models that correspond to CCP interests in weakening U.S. sovereignty, borders, and domestic cohesion.
Understand, the ACLU is no longer a purely domestic civil rights organization — it functions as part of a transnational NGO ecosystem heavily financed by globalist actors.
And while there is no direct evidence that Wang served as a CCP agent or received funding from Chinese state-affiliated entities, not unusual for an actual CCP asset.
In fact, several ideological overlaps and institutional intersections exist:
The ACLU’s partner networks include organizations that have engaged with CCP-linked front NGOs under the banner of “human rights dialogue,” for example, Human Rights in China (HRIC) and Amnesty International USA (which has historically accepted funding from the Chinese-linked United Front-penetrated intermediaries through global U.N. partnerships).
The ACLU has on multiple occasions aligned with CCP diplomatic narratives, such as opposing U.S. scrutiny of Chinese surveillance technology under the rubric of “anti-Asian discrimination” or “xenophobia.” These are examples of latent influence ops—the CCP exploits Western guilt and “race discourse” to mute criticism of Beijing.
Wang herself co-signed letters or participated in events with NGOs with apparent ties to CCP-sympathetic academic institutions, such as the Asia Society and Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, which are known to have received co-sponsorship from Chinese state-tied corporations.
So, while not an admitted operative, she operates within an influence network highly penetrated by CCP narrative symmetry and funding channels.
Wang has collaborated with or spoken at events organized by:
◦ Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) – explicitly
Marxist-rooted organization that defended violent
radicals (e.g., Weather Underground members).
◦ National Immigration Law Center (NILC) – receives
OSF and Tides contributions.
◦ Demos and Brennan Center – both founded by
figures who identify as progressive reformists but
operate on redistributionist and socialized-
control models (shared DNA with European social
democracy and cultural Marxism).
Wang’s litigation and policy advocacy have faced accusations of undermining U.S. sovereignty, including attempts to block deportations even for individuals with criminal histories, and campaigning against biometric border surveillance.
Critics argue she and other ACLU leaders have inflamed anti-police sentiment, helping create the legal backdrop for increased violent crime in cities following the “Defund the Police” push.
The ACLU, under Wang’s legal direction, shifted dramatically from “civil liberties for all” to progressive political activism, such as defending censorship when it aligned with “anti-hate” laws.
Some have criticized Wang for promoting racial essentialism, prioritizing minority group narratives regardless of truth content, which contradicts Martin Luther King’s ideal of color-blind justice.
Cecillia Wang doesn’t operate as an isolated actor but as part of a fusion network:
➡ Globalist capital (Soros / Ford / Tides)
➡ Marxist legal theory (critical studies)
➡ CCP-aligned narrative laundering via “anti-
racism”
➡ Domestic lawfare to erode U.S. border and
policing systems
This symbiotic architecture is classic 21st-century hybrid infiltration — not espionage in the Cold War sense, but ideological convergence between corporate globalists, postmodern Marxists, and authoritarian global powers like China.
There is no verifiable evidence that Wang personally collaborates with the CCP or is on any Chinese payroll.
However:
She works within a transnational NGO intelligence and ideological ecosystem that conveniently aligns with CCP strategic interests.
Her career exemplifies how globalist funding and Marxist-derived ideology have merged inside U.S. “civil rights” institutions.
The ACLU under her influence has transitioned from a defense-of-liberty institution into a legal warfare apparatus for elite, globalized interests pushing border dissolution, censorship wrapped in “equity,” and selective rights application.
And for the record, where was Wang during Xi Jinping's visit to San Francisco in November 2023?
The image is a satire, or is it? 😉