A shocking congressional hearing has raised serious questions about allegations involving the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), donor funds, extremist organizations, and the broader issue of fake hate crimes.
In this video, I break down the hearing testimony, discuss the allegations contained in the referenced indictment, and examine the incentives behind victimhood culture, grievance politics, reputation destruction, and manufactured outrage.
If these allegations are true, they could represent one of the most significant nonprofit scandals in modern American history. If they are false, they raise equally important questions about accountability and political weaponization.
We’ll also look at historical examples of fake hate crime cases, media narratives, and why truth matters more than political tribalism.
Featured Videos:
Fake Hate Crime Archives:
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/X8rH5mBNYf4
Related Analysis:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GkVeFOgmni8
More Coverage:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fx4DJ21B-3M
Topics Covered:
• SPLC congressional hearing
• SPLC indictment allegations
• Fake hate crimes
• Victimhood culture
• KKK funding allegations
• Neo-Nazi recruitment allegations
• Southern Poverty Law Center controversy
• Free speech and media narratives
• Political incentives and fundraising
• Jordan Peterson on gossip and reputation destruction
Chapters:
00:00 Introduction
01:12 SPLC hearing breakdown
04:35 Allegations involving donor funds
08:40 The business of victimhood
13:55 Fake hate crimes and media narratives
18:42 Jordan Peterson on gossip and reputation attacks
22:15 Why truth eventually comes out
25:00 Final thoughts
DISCLAIMER:
This video discusses allegations raised during congressional testimony and referenced legal proceedings. Allegations remain allegations unless proven in court. Viewers are encouraged to review source materials and reach their own conclusions.
SPLC hearing, SPLC indictment, Southern Poverty Law Center, fake hate crimes, congressional hearing, KKK allegations, neo nazi allegations, extremist groups, donor fraud allegations, victimhood culture, grievance politics, political corruption, congressional testimony, hate group funding allegations, media narratives, free speech, censorship, Jordan Peterson gossip, reputation destruction, victim mentality, Charlottesville controversy, civil rights organizations, nonprofit accountability, political fundraising, congressional investigation, white supremacy allegations, SPLC controversy, hate crime hoaxes, donor transparency, truth and accountability, culture war news, political commentary, Disruptarian, Ryan Thompson, fake victim narratives, congressional oversight, nonprofit scandal, public corruption, free market commentary, anti cens
In this episode of Disruptive Cooking, we ditch the pasta and go straight for the grill. This is a BBQ-style Chicken Parmesan Tortilla Melt, packed with eviscerated chicken paste made from 3 whole boneless chicken breasts, loaded with mozzarella cheese, wrapped in tortillas, and finished with a rich parmesan marinara sauce.
No pasta. No rules. Just fire, butter, cheese, chicken, and sauce.
We grill it slow so the chicken cooks through, the mozzarella melts deep inside, and the tortillas get golden, buttery, and crisp. The outside gets coated with butter as it cooks, giving it that perfect grilled finish.
This is comfort food with a free market attitude: take the old recipe, break the rules, make it better.
Learn more about Disruptive Cooking at:
www.disruptarian.com
The SPLC built a massive brand around “fighting hate.” But what happens when the anti-hate industry is accused of funding people tied to the same extremist groups it warned America about?
In this commentary, Ryan Thompson breaks down the disturbing claims around the Southern Poverty Law Center, donor money, extremist informants, and the political business model built on fear.
This is not a defense of the KKK, Nazis, Aryan groups, or any form of racial hate. Those movements are toxic, weak, and rejected by normal Americans. The question here is different: did the people claiming to fight hate have a financial incentive to keep hate visible?
We look at the DOJ allegations, the congressional hearing, the SPLC’s huge donor machine, Charlottesville, and how fear can become a revenue stream when nonprofit activism turns into an industry.
Commentary by Ryan Thompson.
Based on the article and hearing transcript discussed here.
Watch, think, and follow the money.
Sources mentioned:
Department of Justice: Federal Grand Jury Charges Southern Poverty Law Center|https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/federal-grand-jury-charges-southern-poverty-law-center-wire-fraud-false-statements-and
House Judiciary Committee: The Southern Poverty Law Center, Manufacturing Hate, Part II|https://judiciary.house.gov/committee-activity/hearings/southern-poverty-law-center-manufacturing-hate-part-ii
ProPublica: Southern Poverty Law Center Nonprofit Explorer|https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/630598743
ADL: Tattered Robes, The State of the Ku Klux Klan in the United States|https://www.adl.org/resources/report/tattered-robes-state-ku-klux-klan-united-states
Today in the Disruptive Kitchen, Ryan “Dickie” Thompson is making Filipino American Fusion Navajo Tacos, a warm, heavy, homemade plate built on fresh Navajo fry bread.
This recipe starts with a simple fry bread base, then turns it into a loaded taco with seasoned meat, beans, lettuce, tomato, cheese, and bold Filipino American flavor.
Basic Fry Bread Ingredients:
All-purpose flour
Baking powder
Salt
Warm water
Oil for frying
Basic Instructions:
Mix the flour, baking powder, and salt in a bowl.
Slowly add warm water until the dough comes together.
Knead the dough until smooth, but do not overwork it.
Cover and let it rest for 15 to 20 minutes.
Divide the dough into small pieces and flatten into round disks.
Heat oil to about 350°F.
Fry each piece for 1 to 2 minutes per side, until golden brown.
Drain on paper towels.
Top with seasoned meat, beans, lettuce, tomato, cheese, onions, jalapeños, salsa, or sour cream.
This version brings together Navajo fry bread, American taco comfort food, and Filipino family-style cooking. Simple food. Big flavor. No fancy nonsense.
Recipe base adapted from PathCulture’s Navajo fry bread guide, which lists the basic fry bread ingredients, frying steps, and Navajo taco topping ideas.
Video topic confirmed from uploaded transcript.
Here’s a quick highlight from Disruptive Kitchen with Ryan “Dickie” Thompson, making Filipino American Fusion Navajo Tacos.
This short clip gives you a taste of the full episode: homemade fry bread, loaded taco toppings, Filipino American flavor, and straight kitchen talk from Disruptarian Radio.
No fancy chef routine. Just real food, family flavor, and a solid plate built from scratch.
Watch the full video here:
https://youtu.be/M2-KV27pKak