04-25-2026Price:

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Politics

SPLC indicted in hate funding scheme

Saturday, April 25, 2026 · from 2 podcasts
  • Federal indictment alleges SPLC paid extremists to stoke fear and boost donations.
  • DOJ probes $500M endowment as media smear tactics shield deeper corruption.

A federal grand jury in Alabama has indicted the Southern Poverty Law Center on 11 counts, including money laundering and wire fraud. The indictment alleges the SPLC didn’t just track hate groups - it funded them. Shell entities like 'Rare Books Warehouse' channeled cash to KKK and National Alliance figures, creating the very threats the group then exposed to drive donor panic.

According to Adam Curry and John C. Dvorak on the No Agenda Show, the SPLC operated a 'manufactured hate machine.' The group’s $500 million endowment thrived on fear it helped create. The indictment ties SPLC funds directly to leaders behind the 2017 Charlottesville rally - a narrative later leveraged in national politics.

"The SPLC is not exposing hate. It's producing it."

- Adam Curry, No Agenda Show

The case parallels a broader bureaucratic smear cycle. FBI Director Kash Patel faces anonymous leaks painting him as unstable - claims he’s now suing The Atlantic over. Patel alleges these attacks aim to block his probe into FBI files on election interference and FISA abuses. Former officials like John Brennan decry the investigation as 'retribution,' despite having overseen the same systems now under scrutiny.

The SPLC’s role in global fact-checking networks raises deeper concerns. If the organization is a paid provocateur, the entire media infrastructure built on its designations collapses. Curry and Dvorak frame it as a protection racket: pay up or stay on the hate list. Now, the DOJ’s forensic audit could dismantle decades of impunity.

"They’re not fighting extremism. They’re funding it, then profiting from it."

- John C. Dvorak, No Agenda Show

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

SpaceX-Cursor Deal, SaaS Debt Bomb, New Apple CEO, SPLC Indictment, Colon Cancer SpikeApr 24

Also from this episode: (28)

Other (28)

  • David Sacks, who was in D.C. at the White House, described President Trump as pleasant, genial, and interested in AI issues, contrasting with media portrayals.
  • Sacks noted that President Trump advocates for American AI companies to generate their own power, opposing approaches that halt progress and support DEI values through AI.
  • SpaceX has entered a deal to acquire Cursor, an AI coding startup, by the end of 2026 for $60 billion or pay $10 billion for collaboration, aiming to create the world's best coding AI.
  • Cursor's run rate was $2 billion in February, projected to reach $6 billion by late 2026; this deal could significantly boost SpaceX's projected 2026 revenue of $22-24 billion.
  • Chamath Palihapitiya believes the Cursor deal structure prevents SpaceX's S-1 IPO filing from going stale, effectively giving Elon Musk a 50% discount on the acquisition.
  • David Sacks argues the Cursor acquisition is complimentary, providing XAI with coding expertise, enterprise clients, and training data, while XAI offers compute resources and a foundation model.
  • Chamath Palihapitiya highlighted that much of AI's value is realized in writing software, but enterprises are creating inefficient agents, underscoring the need for strong developer environments like Cursor's IDE.
  • David Sacks anticipates a race to develop dedicated, cost-effective cyber models comparable to Mythos, as AI-powered hacking risks drive demand from IT departments and CSOs.
  • Toma Bravo is reportedly handing Medallia, a customer experience SaaS company acquired for $6.4 billion in 2021, to creditors, wiping out $5.1 billion in equity due to rising debt servicing costs.
  • Chamath Palihapitiya suggests that many vertical SaaS companies are struggling because AI agents make it cheaper and easier for enterprises to spin up internal alternatives, crushing sales and increasing attrition.
  • Kevin Warsh argues that AI's deflationary effect is reducing business costs, leading to economic expansion as companies reinvest savings from SaaS budgets, but also notes that traditional inflation metrics are flawed.
  • David Sacks identifies a challenge for private equity in SaaS, noting that while public SaaS company valuations are attractive (e.g., Salesforce down 32% in six months), predictable cash flows are jeopardized by AI alternatives.
  • Chamath Palihapitiya claims that venture capital and private equity increase SaaS prices to meet return hurdles, making products overpriced and vulnerable to AI-driven cost cutting and unit price reductions.
  • David Sacks advises founders against venture debt, as it reduces maneuverability, imposes business covenants, and makes companies brittle, contrasting with equity sales that align more stakeholders.
  • Chamath Palihapitiya shared his personal experience with a $420 million credit line almost collapsing, reinforcing his belief that debt makes businesses and individuals vulnerable to market disruptions.
  • David Sacks points out that government pension plans, unlike corporate 401Ks, are underfunded due to public employee unions, threatening to bankrupt U.S. governments.
  • Jason Calacanis suggests that government waste, fraud, and abuse in California, exemplified by the homeless industrial complex, could be addressed by eliminating a minimum of 20-30% of inefficiencies.
  • The Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) is facing allegations of wire fraud and money laundering between 2014 and 2023, specifically for funneling over $3 million to informants in hate groups.
  • SPLC allegedly paid an informant, F-37, over $270,000 between 2015 and 2023, who was a member of the online leadership chat group that planned the 2017 Unite the Right event in Charlottesville.
  • David Sacks states the SPLC's fundraising doubled to $136 million after Charlottesville from $58 million in 2016, suggesting the alleged actions were a 'grift' to increase donations.
  • Chamath Palihapitiya calls for the dismantling of NGOs that 'cosplay as overlords' and urges donors to sue the SPLC, citing $822 million allegedly held in offshore bank accounts.
  • David Friedberg criticizes 501(c)(3) non-profit organizations for straying from their IRS-defined charitable activities, suggesting many operate with commercial or misaligned interests.
  • David Sacks posits that civil rights organizations, once achieving their goals, shifted from ensuring equality of opportunity to demanding equality of outcomes, rebranded as 'anti-racism'.
  • Tim Cook's 15-year tenure as Apple CEO saw the company's market cap increase over 10x and revenue grow from $100 billion to over $400 billion, driven by improved services mix.
  • Jason Calacanis believes Apple under Tim Cook missed key innovations like more practical AR glasses, a killer AI assistant, a self-driving car, a search engine, a television, and consumer robotics.
  • Chamath Palihapitiya argues that Tim Cook was an excellent steward, significantly shrinking Apple's share count by 44% and investing in R&D and proprietary silicon, but faces the challenge of adapting to a more heterogeneous device future.
  • A Spanish research team linked the pesticide Picloram, developed by Dow Chemical in 1963, to a scary 80% rise in colorectal cancer in people under 50 over the last two decades.
  • David Friedberg notes that epigenomic studies can now detect long-term effects of chemicals like Picloram, which persists in the environment and has a 3x odds ratio for colon cancer in areas of high use.
No Agenda Show
No Agenda Show

Adam Curry

1862 - "Smear Machine"Apr 23

  • Federal indictments allege the SPLC funded extremist groups to fuel its own massive donor machine.
  • Intelligence officials use media leaks to discredit investigators before they can expose secret files.