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Friday, June 12, 2026

FEEDLY, FLIES, AND THE FINE ART OF DARK MONEY JOURNALISM

 

FEEDLY, FLIES, AND THE FINE ART OF DARK MONEY JOURNALISM

Every morning, like a reasonably caffeinated primate with Wi-Fi, I open Feedly.

For those unfamiliar, Feedly is a news reader — an RSS aggregator, a digital bird dog, a headline truffle pig. It gathers articles from the sites I follow and drops them into one place, so I can scan the daily education wars without having to wander the internet like a lost substitute teacher looking for Room 214.

I use it to help write Big Education Ape, which means my feed is loaded with education news, national politics, labor stories, school privatization schemes, billionaire-funded “reform” theater, and the occasional think-tank press release disguised as journalism.

One of my Feedly search agents follows Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers.

And let me tell you: if you want to understand the modern right-wing outrage machine, set up an alert for Randi Weingarten. It is like putting a porch light on in July. The moths arrive immediately. So do the flies.

Especially the flies.

Randi Weingarten: The Right’s Favorite Union-Shaped Piñata

Randi Weingarten is many things: president of the AFT, labor leader, public education advocate, Democratic power broker, progressive organizer, and one of the most visible defenders of teachers’ unions in the United States.

She is also, judging by the amount of digital ink spilled on her daily, apparently responsible for everything from algebra scores to inflation to the fall of Rome.

To her supporters, she is a fierce advocate for teachers, students, public schools, collective bargaining, and democratic institutions.

To her critics, especially on the privatization right, she is the union boss under the bed — the villain in a policy horror movie funded by people who have never met a public school they did not want to turn into a marketplace.

And that is where Feedly becomes useful.

Because when you track the coverage, patterns emerge. The same kinds of outlets. The same kinds of “watchdog” groups. The same language. The same theatrical outrage. The same solemn declarations that public education is in crisis — followed, almost always, by the same old solution:

Privatize it.

Voucher it.

Charter it.

Defund it.

Break the union.

Call it “freedom.”

Cash the check.

Follow the Money, Not Just the Headline

One of the most important lessons I have learned while reading education news is this:

Always ask who paid for the megaphone.

Not just who wrote the article. Not just who published it. Not just who was quoted as an “expert.”

Ask who funds the organization behind the quote.

Ask who funds the “research.”

Ask who funds the “consumer group.”

Ask who funds the “parents’ rights” outfit with no visible parents and a communications budget that looks like it was air-dropped by a billionaire with trust issues.

Because in education politics, the money often tells the story before the article does.

A headline may say:

“Teachers Union Head Under Fire…”

But the subtext often says:

Dark Money Group That Hates Teachers’ Unions Finds Another Reason to Hate Teachers’ Unions.”

And once you know how the game works, you cannot unsee it.

The 501(c)(4): Where Democracy Goes to Wear a Ski Mask

The great genius — and by genius, I mean civic vandalism with a tax lawyer — of modern political spending is the abuse of nonprofit status.

The Internal Revenue Code has become a political money tunnel. The most famous tunnel is the 501(c)(4), supposedly reserved for “social welfare” organizations.

“Social welfare” sounds lovely. It sounds like soup kitchens, neighborhood clinics, public parks, and people helping people.

But in the post-Citizens United era, “social welfare” can also mean:

  • Attack ads
  • Electioneering
  • Issue campaigns that just happen to name a candidate
  • Political messaging disguised as public education
  • Donor secrecy wrapped in patriotic bunting
  • Billionaire ventriloquism with a nonprofit letterhead

The legal dodge is simple.

The statute says 501(c)(4)s must operate exclusively for social welfare.

But IRS interpretation softened that into primarily for social welfare.

And political lawyers — never ones to leave a loophole unmilked — turned “primarily” into a working theory that a group can spend nearly half its activity on politics while keeping its donors hidden.

That is how you get the unofficial 49% rule: spend 51% on “social welfare,” 49% on politics, and presto — democracy gets laundered through a tax-exempt washing machine.

The public sees the ad.

The donor stays hidden.

The organization sounds civic.

The money smells funny.

Citizens United: The Gift That Keeps on Taking

The Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United v. FEC decision opened the floodgates by allowing corporations, unions, and certain nonprofits to spend unlimited amounts on independent political expenditures.

Defenders called it free speech.

Critics called it plutocracy with a filing deadline.

The problem was not simply that money could pour into politics. The problem was that certain nonprofit structures allowed the original source of that money to remain hidden.

So a wealthy donor can give millions to a 501(c)(4). That organization can then pass money to a Super PAC. The Super PAC reports the nonprofit as the donor. The public sees the shell, not the person or corporation behind it.

It is political nesting dolls, except every doll is holding a checkbook and none of them have to answer questions.

Democracy is supposed to mean:

One person, one vote.

Dark money prefers:

One dollar, one megaphone.

And increasingly:

One billionaire, one shadow government.

501(c)(3)s, 501(c)(4)s, and the Respectable Costume Department

The nonprofit label does a lot of work in American politics.

It gives an organization a halo. It suggests public service, charity, civic concern, educational purpose. It makes the operation sound like a library fundraiser instead of a political knife fight.

But not all nonprofits are created equal.

Here is the basic map:

TypePurposePolitical ActivityPublic Donor Disclosure
501(c)(3)Charitable, educational, religiousCannot support or oppose candidatesNo public donor disclosure
501(c)(4)“Social welfare”Can engage in politics if not primary purposeNo public donor disclosure
527 / PAC / Super PACPolitical campaigns and electionsBuilt for political activityDonor disclosure required

The trouble is that political money does not respect neat categories.

Money moves. It hops fences. It takes Uber. It travels from donor-advised funds to nonprofits to Super PACs to ad campaigns, all while maintaining the public innocence of a church bake sale.

That is why these organizations can become perfect weapons in the education wars.

A group can claim to be doing “education” while promoting privatization.

It can claim to be doing “consumer research” while attacking unions.

It can claim to be defending “parents” while advancing a donor agenda.

It can claim to be nonpartisan while somehow always landing on the same side of the same partisan fights.

Funny how that works.

Consumers’ Research and the Strange Career of a “Consumer” Watchdog

One example worth watching is Consumers’ Research.

Historically, the name sounds harmless enough. Almost quaint. You picture someone testing toasters, checking tire pressure, and warning America about dangerous cribs.

But in recent years, Consumers’ Research has become known for aggressive campaigns against “woke capitalism,” ESG policies, corporate diversity efforts, and progressive political causes. It has also surfaced in stories targeting labor leaders and union-linked financial activism.

Consumers’ Research is registered as a nonprofit. It is not required to publicly disclose its individual donors. But public tax filings and watchdog reporting have pointed to large funding streams from major conservative donor-advised funds and foundations.

The most notable is DonorsTrust, often described by critics as a major dark-money hub for the conservative movement. DonorsTrust allows wealthy donors to route money to causes while keeping their identities hidden from the public.

That does not automatically make every claim from a funded group false. Funding is not a magic wand that turns a sentence into a lie.

But funding does matter.

It tells us what ecosystem a group belongs to. It tells us whose interests may be amplified. It tells us whether a “consumer” campaign is really about consumers — or about preserving corporate and ideological power.

When an outfit with opaque funding attacks a union leader for allegedly politicizing pension power, the irony meter does not merely beep.

It bursts into flames.

The Daily Caller Headline Machine

A recent Daily Caller News Foundation story carried this headline:

“Teachers Union Head Under Fire For Trying To Use Pension Funds For Left-Wing Political Goals”

Now, that headline is doing a lot of heavy lifting. It has “union head,” “under fire,” “pension funds,” and “left-wing political goals” all packed into one sentence like passengers in a clown car.

This is a familiar formula.

First, find a conservative-aligned organization willing to accuse a union leader of something sinister.

Second, frame the accusation as a scandal.

Third, use language that suggests public money, worker retirement funds, and progressive politics are being mixed in a suspicious cauldron.

Fourth, publish it as news.

Fifth, wait for the outrage ecosystem to recycle it.

The target is Randi Weingarten, but the broader target is larger: organized labor, public education, public-sector pensions, shareholder activism, and any attempt by workers to use institutional power the way corporations and billionaires have used it for decades.

When corporations use money to influence politics, we are told that is “free speech.”

When unions use financial power to defend workers, pensions, climate stability, labor standards, or human rights, suddenly everyone clutches pearls so hard they become diamonds.

The Pension Fund Panic Button

One recurring attack on Weingarten and other labor leaders involves the role of pension funds in corporate accountability.

Teacher retirement funds are massive institutional investors. That means they hold shares in corporations. Like other shareholders, pension systems may vote proxies, file resolutions, or push companies on issues that affect long-term financial risk.

That can include:

  • Labor standards
  • Executive compensation
  • Climate risk
  • Corporate governance
  • Political spending disclosure
  • Worker safety
  • Diversity and discrimination policies

Conservative critics often describe this as “left-wing activism.”

But corporations have been political actors forever. They lobby. They fund trade associations. They support candidates. They influence regulation. They shape public policy. They pour money into elections. They hire platoons of lobbyists who can find a loophole in a sealed envelope.

So when worker-backed pension funds say, “Maybe companies should be accountable too,” the same crowd that cheered corporate political spending suddenly discovers the sacred neutrality of finance.

How convenient.

Apparently money is speech when billionaires spend it, but misbehavior when teachers notice they have a microphone too.

The Dark Money Double Standard

This is the central comedy — and tragedy — of the whole arrangement.

The right-wing dark money universe routinely accuses unions, teachers, and public education advocates of being too political.

This accusation often comes from organizations funded through structures designed specifically to hide political money.

That is like a raccoon in a ski mask accusing the school librarian of poor transparency.

Many of these groups call themselves:

  • Institutes
  • Centers
  • Foundations
  • Alliances
  • Councils
  • Projects
  • Research organizations
  • Parent coalitions
  • Consumer advocates

The names sound sober. Responsible. Almost cardigan-like.

But behind the sensible branding is often a political money network built to shape public opinion while shielding donors from scrutiny.

And education is one of their favorite targets.

Why?

Because public education is one of the last large, unionized, publicly funded democratic institutions in America.

It has money.

It has employees.

It has buildings.

It has elected boards.

It has pensions.

It has curriculum.

It has community power.

And for the privatization movement, that makes it irresistible.

Public schools are not just schools to them. They are a market waiting to be cracked open.

Corporate Education Reform: The Long Con in Sensible Shoes

For decades, corporate education reform has sold itself using the language of urgency and compassion.

It says it is about children.

It says it is about civil rights.

It says it is about innovation.

It says it is about choice.

Sometimes, those words are used sincerely. Many parents want better options. Many schools need support. Many children have been failed by underfunded systems, segregation, poverty, and political neglect.

But the privatization movement has often weaponized real pain to sell bad medicine.

Instead of fully funding public schools, it pushes vouchers.

Instead of reducing class sizes, it promotes apps.

Instead of respecting teachers, it attacks tenure and unions.

Instead of addressing poverty, housing, healthcare, and segregation, it blames “government schools.”

Instead of democracy, it offers markets.

And when voters resist, dark money groups arrive to “educate” them.

Very helpful.

Like arsonists offering smoke alarms.

The Real Threat to Democracy

The abuse of 501(c)(3)s and 501(c)(4)s, combined with Citizens United, has produced one of the most anti-democratic systems in American public life.

It allows the wealthy to shape politics without accountability.

It allows corporations and billionaires to launder influence through nonprofit branding.

It allows ideological campaigns to masquerade as independent research.

It allows propaganda to arrive wearing the nametag “educational organization.”

This is not healthy democracy.

This is oligarchy with a receipt.

A democratic system requires transparency. Citizens should be able to know who is trying to influence their votes, their schools, their laws, their pensions, and their public institutions.

The answer is not complicated.

We need:

  • Stronger disclosure laws
  • Real enforcement by the IRS and FEC
  • Clear rules separating social welfare from electioneering
  • An end to dark money pass-through schemes
  • Public identification of major political donors
  • Reversal or serious legislative repair of Citizens United
  • Protection of public institutions from billionaire capture

Because democracy cannot function when the people speaking the loudest are hiding behind a mailbox, a law firm, and a patriotic logo.

One Person, One Vote — Not One Dollar, One Vote

At the end of the day, this is not just about Randi Weingarten.

She is the target of the week, the month, the decade — depending on how many dark-money press releases are in circulation.

But the bigger issue is the machinery aimed at public education and organized labor.

Teachers’ unions are not perfect. No institution is. Public schools are not perfect. Neither is Congress, the Supreme Court, the IRS, the media, or the average school district copier, which jams every time someone needs 90 worksheets before first period.

But unions are democratic organizations representing workers.

Public schools are democratic institutions serving communities.

Dark money groups are something else entirely.

They are the privatized shadow version of politics: donor-driven, lawyer-protected, tax-advantaged, and allergic to sunlight.

So yes, I use Feedly.

I follow the headlines.

I track the sources.

I read the attacks.

And when I see another “nonprofit” outfit funded by hidden money accusing public educators of corrupting democracy, I remember the oldest rule in politics:

Follow the money.

Then follow the tax status.

Then follow the donors — if you can find them.

Because in today’s America, some of the loudest voices in the room are not citizens speaking freely.

They are dollars wearing a nonprofit costume.

And democracy deserves better than government by ventriloquist dummy.

Big Education Ape Takeaway

If America wants a real democracy, it must stop pretending that anonymous billionaire spending is civic participation.

A vote is a voice.

A dollar is not a citizen.

And a dark-money nonprofit attacking public education is not “social welfare.”

It is propaganda with paperwork.