Karen Bass: The Globalist Gospel of a City's Neglect

@eggtimer · 2025-06-09 10:39 · politics

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In the City of Angels, where the sun hemorrhages into the skyline and dreams are hawked like knockoff watches, Karen Bass grips the wheel of power, draped in the glitzy shroud of mayoral prestige. To most, she’s the face of Los Angeles, a title that sparkles but conceals a maze of shadows. This year, she botched the wildfire crisis, leaving the city choking on ash and outrage, but that’s just the opening act in the theater of her existence. Let’s rip the curtain down.

Before the mayor’s crown, Bass was a player in the National Endowment for Democracy, a name that drips with virtue but reeks of hidden agendas. Vice Chair, they called her, a role less about spreading freedom and more about pulling strings in foreign shadows. The NED isn’t just an NGO; it’s a machine, bankrolled by Uncle Sam to orchestrate color revolutions and prop up Western puppets under the banner of “democracy.” Soft power? Try a silk glove over a sledgehammer.

Then there’s the scholarship scandal, a twisted tale of favors and immunity. LA County Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas got snared in a federal net, accused of trading cash for a USC scholarship like it was a back-alley deal. Bass? She pocketed the same prize, yet walked away clean, untouched by the law’s reach. No headlines, no handcuffs—just a wink from a system that shields its darlings. Why the free pass? Because when you’re stitched into the fabric of the machine, with threads stretching from D.C. to the murky nonprofit underworld, you’re bulletproof. She’s not just a DEI poster child; she’s a gear in the globalist grind, spinning faster than the truth.

This is Karen Bass, a saga of ambition and contradiction, where hero and villain bleed into one. Her story’s no fairy tale—it’s a noir, and the plot’s just thickening.

Her political spark ignited early, a middle schooler swept up in Robert Kennedy’s campaign, eyes wide with the fever of change. By the time she hit San Diego University from ’71 to ’73, studying philosophy, she wasn’t just pondering existence—she was living it, a full-throttle activist. At 19, she wasn’t cramming for finals; she was jetting to Cuba every six months with the Venceremos Brigade, a Castro-sanctioned crew that wasn’t just about solidarity but indoctrination. Each trip was a crash course in revolution, soaking up the rhetoric of a regime that thumbed its nose at the Stars and Stripes. She wasn’t just a student; she was a disciple, learning the art of power from a government that played it like a blood sport.

The Cuba jaunts shaped her, molded her into a strategist who could weave idealism with cold calculation. Universities like hers were petri dishes for radicals, breeding activists who’d trade tie-dye for suits and slide into NGOs like the NED, turning passion into a paycheck. Bass was no exception. The Trump era saw this as a virus, a foreign ideology infecting American soil, but for Bass, it was fuel. She shed the hippie vibes of peace and love for the hard edges of Castro’s doctrine, embracing a vision where control trumped freedom. The counterculture’s dream of flower power wilted against her new gospel of order and influence.

By the late ’80s, she was back in LA, founding the Community Coalition—CoCo to its friends—a South Los Angeles outfit with a noble pitch: grassroots change. EIN 954298811, assets at $31 million, pulling in $9 million a year, $3 million from government grants. Sounds righteous, but dig deeper. CoCo’s big move? Town halls. Lots of them. Meanwhile, their budget sinks into salaries and benefits, and LA’s drug crisis spikes like a bad fever. Impact? Questionable. But for Bass, CoCo was a launchpad, rocketing her to California’s 47th Assembly District as the first Black woman in the state legislature. Re-elected in ’06 and ’08, she climbed fast, snagging the majority whip spot in ’05, a role that let her flex her muscle in party politics.

Her time in the Assembly was a tightrope walk—balancing her district’s cries for help with the party’s demands. CoCo’s grassroots grit clashed with Sacramento’s polished halls, forging a leader who could preach change while playing the game. But did the streets of LA shape her, or did the system bend her first?

In 2011, Bass leapt to Congress, representing California until 2022. As ranking member of the Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights, and International Organizations, she racked up over thirty trips to Africa, cementing her global activist cred. By 2014, she was knee-deep in the NED, speaking at their World Movement for Democracy in ’18 and rising to Vice Chair by ’21—all while still in Congress. The NED, flush with $350 million in taxpayer cash, thrives on “democracy promotion,” but its fingerprints are on regime changes and proxy wars. Bass wasn’t just a bystander; she was a conductor, orchestrating moves on a global chessboard. Her NED gig wasn’t a side hustle—it was a masterclass in power. Appointed faster than most Senators, she juggled Capitol Hill and international influence like a pro. But what did her global crusade mean for her votes in Congress? Did her activist roots hold, or did the NED’s agenda rewrite her script?

Then came the 2022 corruption bomb. Mark Ridley-Thomas, her LA ally, got slammed for funneling funds to USC for a scholarship deal. Bass? Same scholarship, same school, but no cuffs, no questions. The feds looked the other way, and she glided through, even eyed for HUD Secretary in Biden’s cabinet. Instead, she pushed Xavier Becerra for HHS, a choice that backfired. Becerra’s child welfare policies—allegedly soft on traffickers—sparked a whistleblower revolt from Cindy Huang, who quit after raising alarms. Bass’s role in his rise begs questions: was she blind to his flaws, or just playing the game?

On paper, Bass is all smiles and community vibes, but the wildfire fiasco exposed her. Labeled a DEI mayor, she’s no token—she’s a titan of leftist activism, wired into a global network that trumps local woes. While LA burned, she jetted to Ghana, not for vacation but to rep Biden at a presidential inauguration. The city’s homeless camps, crime spikes, and drug deaths? Background noise to her world-stage performance. Raised in the crucible of globalism, she’s less mayor, more missionary, preaching unity while LA’s potholes gape like open graves.

She didn’t show up for the photo ops or the small talk. Bass arrived, Biden’s emblem tattooed on her purpose, ready to salute a foreign leader while her city choked on neglect. Her name was etched on the elite’s roster before she could spell it, handed a script for a globalist gospel. LA’s just a stage prop—vivid, chaotic, ignored. She’s too busy curating her world tour, shaking hands in Geneva, perfecting her bow in Brussels, to notice the city rotting under her watch. This isn’t leadership; it’s a solo act, a fleeting monologue before the spotlight shifts. Los Angeles, vibrant and broken, is just her backdrop, and the residents? They’re screaming for a rewrite she’ll never deliver.

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