American Thought Leaders - Link Between Antifa and Homelessness Nonprofits | Jonathan Choe
Episode Date: January 3, 2026“I’m seeing crime, chaos, and death on the streets of America. ... The homeless are being used. And Antifa, the far left activists, they want to keep the tent encampments on America’s streets to... show that capitalism isn’t working,” said Jonathan Choe, a reporter for Turning Point USA’s Frontlines and a senior journalism fellow at the Discovery Institute.At Turning Point USA’s AmFest conference, I sat down with Choe to discuss his investigations into Antifa and the homelessness epidemic in America.While some nonprofits are really helping people, Choe said, he believes a sizable portion of the sector has become a multi-billion-dollar “cash cow” of grift and counterproductive aid.“For years now, the so-called experts of the medical community—instead of getting people into treatment and recovery—have been giving away free meth pipes, fentanyl foil,” he said.In 2025, he and several of his colleagues worked on a joint study by the Capital Research Center and the Discovery Institute that revealed a notable intersection between Antifa and the homelessness nonprofit space, he said.Antifa members have embedded in the homelessness nonprofit sector and many of them have day jobs in the space, he said.“A lot of [Antifa’s] ideas to bring communism, Marxism, to destabilize America, to usher in a brand new communist revolution that’s part of the homeless industrial complex now,” he said.In October 2025, Choe and other journalists, including Andy Ngo, participated in a White House roundtable to share their knowledge about Antifa with President Donald Trump.A month earlier, Trump had signed an executive order designating Antifa as a domestic terrorist organization. And in July 2025, he signed another order called “Ending Crime and Disorder on America’s Streets” that takes a more aggressive treatment-first instead of housing-first approach to homelessness.Many states, including Washington and California, are now suing the Trump administration.Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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America's streets look like a war zone.
This is a multi-billion dollar industry
where they've taken advantage of federal dollars for so many years.
At Turning Point USA's Amfest Conference,
I sat down with Jonathan Cho,
a reporter for Turning Point USA's Frontlines
and a senior journalism fellow at the Discovery Institute.
He's been investigating Antifa
and the homelessness epidemic in America.
The so-called experts of the medical community,
instead of getting people into treatment and recovery,
have been giving away free meth pipes, fentanyl foil, and needles.
This crisis isn't just about failed policies.
It's about who benefits from the chaos, Cho argues.
The homeless are being used.
Antifa, the far-left activists,
they want to keep the tent encampments on America's streets
to show that capitalism isn't working.
This is American Thought Leaders, and I'm Yanya Kelek.
Jonathan Cho, such a pleasure to have you on American.
thought leaders. Hey, thanks. This has been a dynamic week so far here at Amfest, so I'm excited to be
here. Well, so last time I saw you, I think you were at a roundtable with the president talking about
Antifa. What has come of that, of this focus of Antifa and this apparent designation of
Antifa as a domestic terror organization? Well, swift prosecution and some arrests. And obviously
we want to see more but you know most recently there were four people arrested in texas they were
allegedly trying to plant bombs uh around nice facility so you know that was you know in my opinion
influenced by this theme of antifa now finally in the national consciousness uh and you know these folks
are saying they're not part of antifa but obviously the tell-tale signs are there and and when it comes to
I mean, I think this consciousness around Antifa being real, because, of course, we're always told it's not an organization or whatever.
I'm trying to understand, you know, is this something that's actually being impacted?
Of course, there was this arrest, but is this something, because it's a loose network in many cases, right?
So it's hard to kind of pinpoint.
Is this actually in the process of being dismantled?
Well, look, bottom line, let me be very clear.
I'm on the front lines of these protests
in Seattle and Portland and other parts of America
and when people are wearing all black block
and waving flags that literally say
Antifa, I'm going to take them at face value
okay? So there's no doubt about that
and then when destruction, chaos,
destabilization of a city
because of their violence,
that's Antifa. I'm going to take them at face value.
Now, in terms of prosecutions,
that's not my job. It's on the administration now.
It's on the feds.
Local authorities barely,
doing anything about it, unfortunately.
Still.
Still. And that's the problem, right?
And look, I can only speak about what's happening on the front lines in Portland.
Right now there is a lawsuit filed by my colleague Nick Sorter, who was also part of that
White House roundtable, where they're now trying to figure out if Portland PD actually
colluded with Antifa leaders in terms of communication.
So that's going to be really interesting to find out.
But this is an issue that is going to be going into the new year, and we're hoping to see more
prosecutions. Okay. Well, so let's put a pin in that. You know, the big issue that you
work on with Discovery Institute, which by the way is an organization I deeply value, is around
this issue of the homeless industrial complex and homelessness more broadly. Now, it seems like
that itself is being impacted also by the policies of this administration. Yeah, you know,
it's been a real privilege being a part of Discovery's media team for the past three years now.
We're going into our fourth year there.
I primarily focus on the Fix Homelessness Initiative
where we tell stories about the homeless drug crisis
that has ravaged many cities in America,
especially on the West Coast.
Crazy enough, the top three states
with the most homelessness in America are in New York,
rather, here's the order, California, New York,
then Washington, where I live.
Can you believe Washington is number three?
So with that said, we've had senior fellows
from Discovery Institute now go to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development,
and they're creating and crafting the policies for the Trump administration.
So Trump's most recent executive order that essentially takes money from these failed housing first initiatives
where for the past decade they've been giving away apartments, studios, no questions asked,
no requirements to get jobs, no requirements to go into detox at the expense of taxpayers to people living on the streets.
hasn't been working. So now they're going to be taking those federal funds and putting it towards
programs that focus on detox, that focus on treatment, that focus on dealing with mental
illness. So we believe there's going to be big change. So I mean, I think a key operative term here
is accountability, right? There has to be some kind of accountability relationship. Is that right?
Right. So the accountability is going to be really simple as far as I know. These nonprofits,
the cities, the states that have been receiving federal funds to deal with a homeless crisis on the
streets, when they apply now for these federal grants to fund their programs, they're going
to have to prove and show that their programs are now geared towards treatment and recovery
first. Again, instead of just giving away apartments and studios under their failed housing first
program. Okay. Has, do you have, are there case studies now where something has changed,
something is working? Well, it's so new. It hasn't even been a year since Trump.
executive orders been put out, but we're hearing anecdotally, and I can speak for what's happening
in places like San Francisco, Seattle, Portland, these nonprofits under these so-called homeless
industrial complex, they're running around like their hairs on fire right now, because they're being
forced to pivot. Now, obviously, what they're going to do is they're not going to go away.
This is a multi-billion dollar industry where they've taken advantage of federal dollars for so
many years. So in some cases, they're simply trying to change the language and say, hey, we've
always been about detox and recovery. But again, the proof is going to be in their programs when
they apply. What will it really look like? Here's the other piece that's happening. A lot of these
cities and states, like Washington, for example, they're suing the Trump administration.
California is doing this as well. And they're fear mongering. They're going to say, all these
people living in these housing first apartments, permanent supportive housing, are going to be
forced onto the streets. That's not going to happen. Now, of course, when you press the leaders,
the CEO of these nonprofits making more than 400K a year and you say, okay, hey, will you take a pay cut
then? Mom, silence. So again, it really has been a grift for so many years. I want to be really
careful at the same time, not to throw everyone in the same basket because there are nonprofits
that have been doing good work. Groups like Salvation Army, Union Gospel Mission. But again,
And these are faith-based groups in many cases that have not been taking the federal funds.
I think a lot of that money is now going to be deployed into those types of working programs.
Fascinating. Okay, so tell me a little bit about what you have seen in your reporting,
and maybe we'll include some of the video that you've taken in these areas.
But tell me about over the last several years that you have been working with the Discovery
Media team, what you saw, what you found.
Well, look, Mike, unfortunately, my punchline now is the video don't lie.
I'm seeing crime, chaos, and death on the streets of America.
I mean, Seattle looks like a third world country right now.
You have tent encampments in the downtown core and taking over public parks.
San Francisco, Portland, Los Angeles, even worse.
So there truly is a crisis on the streets,
but it's been the wrong public policies and the wrong approaches
that have essentially enabled this problem to spiral out of control.
So right now, we are in a rinse-repeat cycle.
I believe out of all the four cities that I mentioned, I call them the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, San Francisco probably will turn around much quicker than the other cities that I just mentioned because they have a mayor in Daniel Lurie, who is focused on treatment first.
He publicly has acknowledged that housing first is failing, and here's the other piece to this equation.
Something called harm reduction. Your audience may not know what this is, but for years now,
the so-called experts of the medical community instead of getting people into treatment and recovery have been giving away free
meth pipes fentanyl foil and needles now I get it during the 80s during the AIDS crisis we needed clean needles and in many ways I'm still for clean needles
but what do you need free meth pipes for what do you need fentanyl foil for the you know the DEA has said one pill can kill so why are we allowing these people to smoke fentanyl and enabling to do that with these
kits makes no sense what change have you seen over those three years that you've done this work well i
think there are and i i know for a fact i think the establishment some of the politicians who have
presided over this failure they're starting to realize the current plan is not working so to double
down on this would be foolish but i think the biggest change has been the independent journalists like
myself, people at Discovery Institute, who have now been spotlighting this narrative, that's
this story about America's homeless crisis, it's been ignored for so long that we've now been
able to show the counter-narratives, right? For example, I worked in corporate media for 20-plus
years, and whenever we would cover homelessness on the streets, it would be during Thanksgiving.
We'd go to the shelters or the people volunteering at the soup kitchens, and we would all feel good,
but nobody would get into the root causes.
So the few outlets that did cover this crisis
would be sort of the more left-leaning NPRs of the world.
And when they brought their experts on,
the experts would always say when they would be asked,
how do you solve homelessness?
What are the root causes?
They would always say, build more housing.
But what they would never get into was the other side.
And that's the research Discovery Institute
has been bringing now to the national conversation.
The root causes, the data,
clearly now shows it's drug addiction, mental illness, and broken relationships.
Unfortunately, a lot of the public policy has not been able to address those three issues.
So, of course, it takes time to affect change, even as there's these changes in policy
or rules that are being implemented from the HUD side of things.
You said that the nonprofits are concerned or they're trying to pivot very quickly.
pushing back. Oh, they're pushing back.
Absolutely. They're saying they don't want the policy.
They want to stick with what was before.
Of course, because they're making billions of dollars.
Their cash cows about to be crippled and disrupted.
Well, I mean, couldn't they just do the new thing and also take the money?
They could, but behind a lot of this is a dangerous far-left ideology.
And that's the piece that a lot of people have not been able to get into.
We've looked into it.
And what I've found in my own personal reporting is that you have the far-left progressives.
who have been captured, almost by a religion.
And that has infiltrated and seeped into the homeless non-profit space.
And this is what I talked about, getting back to the White House roundtable,
out of my 12 colleagues who've covered Antifa on the front lines and the protests,
and I've done that as well,
what we brought was a joint study with Capital Research Center and Discovery Institute,
and we presented that to the Trump administration.
And part of that data and research showed that there was an intersection
between Antifa violent militants and the homeless non-profit space.
In other words, a lot of the Antifa folks, when they weren't trashing the streets,
their day jobs would be in the nonprofit homelessness space.
So a lot of their ideas to bring communism, Marxism,
to destabilize America to usher in a brand new communist revolution,
that's part of the homeless industrial complex now, and that's what we called out.
Fascinating.
So just how big is this overlap?
It's hard to quantify to answer, to be perfectly blunt.
It's there.
It's in pockets.
It's in places like San Francisco, but especially in places like Portland and Seattle, again, where I have personally reported,
I'm connected to pretty much everybody in the homeless outreach space.
And these homeless outreach workers during sweeps, when they're trying to get these men and women's into shelter,
you have Antifa members who are essentially blocking them
and preventing the homeless from being taken into, you know, housing, essentially.
Basically, you're kind of telling me here that the homeless have been, you know,
unwittingly employed as tools in the revolution or something.
100% right.
In other words, the homeless are being used.
Antifa, the far-left activists, they want to keep the tent encampments on America's streets
to show that capitalism isn't willing.
working. So they are literally, in some cases, setting up encampments. I mean, go online right now
what's happening real time in Seattle. In front of Starbucks HQ, there are numerous encampments
now set up. Now, in that situation, they're trying to get a new union deal, okay, and they're trying
to get more money for their workers. But a lot of those folks, these professional activists who also
protests, you know, in the homeless space, they cross over worlds as well. So they're working in
unison. So it is this very interesting consolation network of activists, protesters, working
in various non-profit spaces, and what they try to do at the end of the day, it's about wrecking
capitalism. While working on the ground, what's the craziest thing you've encountered?
I mean, the craziest, I guess, and the saddest at the same time is seeing children, babies.
I did a story last year where we uncovered an infant, sleeping with her.
mom in an encampment and we asked the mom point blank why don't you go into a shelter there
are people who will put you up in a hotel to transition until you can get an apartment and it was always
the relationship with another guy the guy who was addicted to the drugs staying on the streets
and she wanted to be with her baby daddy so that's in many cases what's been preventing these families
from getting into safer more stable situations because you have a family member addicted to drugs
on the streets. And let me be very clear, you know, this isn't like the crack and cocaine epidemic
of the 80s. This is fentanyl. We've never seen a drug like this. It's been the game changer.
So I was in San Francisco very, very recently a few weeks back. And, you know, I made a point of
kind of going through different parts of the city, even the tenderloin, which is kind of known to be
the most, let's say, populated with people who have mental illness and know how.
housing. And it really did look different. Like I saw, I mean, I think there's been a significant
impact. I mean, because I was there a year before and it really didn't look good at all.
So, I mean, it's possible to shift pretty quickly, it seems to me. You mentioned you thought
San Francisco would be first. Right. And it comes down to leadership. It comes down to surrounding
yourself with truth tellers. It comes down to administrations getting rid of these activists who
essentially want to keep the status quo. And in San Francisco, I want to be very clear,
Daniel Lurie inherited a mess that's been in the making for several decades now. So it's
not going to change overnight. But clearly, the other key piece to this is law enforcement,
bringing the police to actually enforce drug laws that are already on the books, as opposed
to a lot of these progressives. Now, especially in Seattle, we're dealing with a mayor-elect and
Katie Wilson. And on the campaign trail, she said she would
not clear homeless encampments in parts of the city.
She wanted to make sure that people would not be moved until they get apartments.
That's just unrealistic.
And that's the type of ideology, strategy that these cities are under, and they're failing.
What do you think, you know, based on your work, based on this treatment-first approach that you've been looking at the research around,
what is the kind of correct process for a city to take?
Well, I believe the cities right now that are dealing with the current homeless drug crisis on the streets,
first of all have to acknowledge that the current plan is not working and that it's been a mistake.
And that's probably the hardest thing to do for many of these politicians who have put their reputations on the line
and nobody wants to get behind a failed public policy.
But again, I think San Francisco has been a great example, a brand,
new mayor coming in and Daniel
Lurie saying we've made a mistake
this isn't working we have to do
better and we have to save lives
and he's made a commitment to that that's one
of his top pillars and
until other politicians and leaders
take that courageous step
we're going to see the same cycle
continuing on and when the mistake
is housing first housing first
this has been tried now
and let me be very clear it's not like housing
first has only been tried for a few years
it's been tried for more than a decade
It started under, you know, Bush number two at the tail end and the Obama administration.
You know, President Obama said, unsheltered homelessness under Housing First would end within a decade.
It's been 12 years now, and it's still failing.
And it wasn't until President Trump and his administration finally came in and realized,
my God, America's streets look like a war zone.
How did we get to this point?
So it takes, again, courageous leadership, risk-taking, and a willingness to go against the status quo to be a contrarian to really get out of this mess.
There's this idea of a kind of extreme sort of liberalism, right?
When you're saying, well, I don't want to force anyone to do anything.
That's right.
I don't want them to, I can't stop them from taking their drug because it would be wrong for me to force them, coerce them or whatever.
The other view is, and from everybody that I've talked on the street with, ever,
who's made it off the street.
They've said someone came in and there was an intervention.
I got arrested.
I mean, there's many scenarios,
but it all had to do with them being kind of almost forced off the street in some way.
In some cases, it was a family member.
But, okay, so what does it look like to do treatment first?
Is there an aspect element of coercion here?
Do people have to make those decisions on their own?
How does this work?
You pretty much describe what treatment first should look like.
that does require intervention, it does require offers to go into treatment, and it should be easier to go into treatment facilities.
One of the biggest issues right now in places like Seattle is that we don't have enough treatment facilities that are easily accessible.
Treatment facilities should be next to every single housing first facility, as far as I'm concerned.
And we assume the taxpayers, the voters assume that this treatment and recovery is in these buildings,
where the homeless have essentially been warehouse,
but that's not the case at all.
In fact, you don't even have enough workers to deal with these people.
So what you're doing is pretty much shoving drug addicts,
mentally ill people under the same roof
as people who may be just a step away
from getting that treatment and back into society
under a one-size-fits-all approach.
And it's been awful.
You have, in some cases, drug dealers living in these houses,
housing first facilities. So number one, we've got to make treatment much easier to access.
It's such an easy target, right? If you have people who are just coming off of drugs or just
addicted, I mean, what better place to sell drugs, I guess, right? Right. You have the ecosystem right
there. Why not live there and benefit? And it's very little vetting that's been going on. And here's
the other piece that's really, in my opinion, sinister. You have these outreach workers who are getting
millions of taxpayer dollars, and I've seen it with my own eyes, they're not offering treatment
and recovery. They simply go and check on people, give them a granola bar, a bottle of water,
and ask, hey, do you need any other supplies? They're just keeping them there. The outreach
that I see that's been working is direct intervention, saying, hey, you can't camp on this
public sidewalk. Here are the options. I will physically take you to treatment.
and detox. If they refuse, bring in the cops. At the end of the day, we're at a point right now,
we have to make a dress. And as you said, there have been numerous people now. Hundreds, thousands
of people who have had testimonies that the 72-hour detox, and let me be very clear, we're not
talking about permanent prison just for camping on the streets or being a drug addict. We're saying
it's temporary. Get your mind cleared. And from that point on, after release from jail, you're going
straight into detox and recovery.
That is the key.
That's what needs to be implemented.
So we'll have to wait and see if that's going to be the approach.
Oh, well, I mean, this is absolutely fascinating.
So this connection, I still keep thinking about this connection between Antifa and the homeless complex.
Where else are these connections that you found?
Because I know, I'm sure you've found others as well.
Like what other systems are that is Antifa connected into?
Well, look, I've been covering Seattle now for the past six years.
You know, I'm from Boston, the East Coast.
I talked to my reporter friends in that market.
They have no idea what Antifa even is.
So it really, in my experience, has been more of a West Coast phenomenon.
So what I've seen, again, is Antifa in the homeless space,
but also in these government, non-profit spaces as well,
the areas that focus on DEI implementation, for example.
LGBTQ, transgender non-profits, that's where I see a lot of these disenfranchised workers, you know, embedded.
So, again, you have this ecosystem, you have the DEI, you have the LGBTQ community, the homeless space, the drug addiction space, all in cahoots with one another.
And that's what I've seen.
And, I mean, using federal money or state money?
Yeah, indirectly.
Because essentially, these Antifa, alleged Antifa members are getting salaries from these non-profits, right?
Now, obviously, there's no carve-out for all this goes to our Antifa militants who act as muscle during homeless encampment sweep so we can, you know, block the cops from moving our homeless, you know, friends out on the streets.
So you don't have anything blatant such as that, but just the direct funding to some of these nonprofits.
And that's what the White House right now is looking at as well, the money trail, the funding from the Tides Foundation, from open,
Society's Foundation, you know, from Soros, it's all there in writing. And until that funding
network gets dismantled, we're going to see, again, more of the grip, more waste when it comes
of federal dollars. Okay. Well, Jonathan, this has been a fascinating conversation for me.
A final thought as we finish up? Final thoughts? Again, I cannot emphasize the importance
of independent media now. In this information war,
that we are clearly in.
We're in this mess, partly
due to the fact that only one
side of this narrative
has been put out there.
The housing first, we've got to get more affordable housing,
and the narrative about
drug addiction, mental illness, and broken
relationships, nine out of ten
people I interview on the streets say
they were kicked out from their home
because they had an abusive parent
or they had a drug addiction.
It wasn't a lack of housing.
Here's the other secret. A lot of these folks,
can help restore those relationships.
They don't need new housing.
They just need a bus ticket back home to mom and dad.
So I think that's been one of the biggest insights that I've seen on the streets in the past year.
Well, Jonathan Cho, it's such a pleasure to have had you on.
Thanks again.
Thank you all for joining Jonathan Cho and me on this episode of American Thought Leaders.
I'm your host, Yanya Kellick.
