
A striking post has been circulating in leftist social media spaces that deserves serious attention from anyone invested in building a genuine revolutionary movement in America.
X.com user @jccfergie (Fergie Chambers), a wealthy self-described “Tankie shapeshifter” has published what he describes as firsthand knowledge of the organizational structure of the Party for Socialism and Liberation (PSL), including a hand-drawn diagram by PSL leaders Ben Becker and Vijay Prashad themselves. The diagram maps PSL’s relationship to a constellation of organizations including The People’s Forum (TPF), BreakThrough News (BTN), ANSWER Coalition, the International People’s Assembly (IPA), and Cuba solidarity and international project organizations. Beyond these “external” organizations are references to United Fronts that PSL leads, rather than participates within. For many on the left who have engaged with these spaces in good faith, this is not entirely surprising, but the specificity and the sourcing of these claims demands that we take them seriously.
The core claims from Fergie Chambers are pointed and specific. The People’s Forum, widely regarded as an independent radical cultural and organizing space in New York City, is described as being “WHOLLY funded, staffed, and controlled by PSL, whose office is in the same building upstairs.” The monthly rent for that building was reportedly $90,000 as of late 2023. BreakThrough News, a media outlet with a significant following among socialist and anti-imperialist audiences, is similarly described as staffed and controlled by PSL’s central committee from within the same building. ANSWER Coalition, one of the most visible anti-war coalitions in the country, is identified as part of PSL’s broader formation. The International People’s Assembly, which presents itself as a global grassroots convergence, is described as “fully under their control.”
These are serious structural claims, not interpersonal grievances. The poster is explicit about this distinction: *”I would not divulge all this based solely on ‘beef.’ I do it because I firmly believe they are counterinsurgency, and a danger to our movements; in terms of containment and co-optation, they are THE biggest danger.”*
What makes this thread particularly significant is Chambers’ account of being personally courted by PSL leadership. He describes having land in Massachusetts where he was running small agriculture, a gym program, housing, and political education. PSL reportedly proposed building a country-based project modeled on The People’s Forum using those spaces. He writes:
They misplayed their hand, and I think they thought that I was a little stupider than I am, and maybe a little less reckless than I am. Because of that they showed a lot of their cards to me really fast, because they were enthusiastic about me collaborating financially with them.
This account of PSL figures approaching high net worth individuals and proposing to incorporate their projects into the PSL network under the banner of collaborative left organizing fits a recognizable pattern. The organizations in the diagram are not presented to the public as PSL front groups. They are presented as independent spaces. That gap between presentation and structure is at the heart of the concern being raised.
The mention of Vijay Prashad, a prolific writer, director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research, and one of the most widely-read figures in the international socialist left, is notable. Prashad is beloved in many circles for his anti-imperialist writing and his work connecting Global South movements. His alleged role in drawing up an organizational diagram meant to court financial and material support raises uncomfortable questions about the relationship between his public intellectual work and PSL’s organizational agenda.
@HakawatiSunbird commented simply: “Prashad is not to be trusted,” to which Chambers responded: “Prashad has never had a principle that wasn’t for sale.” These are sharp words, and they reflect a growing frustration among leftists who feel that high-profile intellectuals functioning within these networks lend them a credibility that obscures rather than illuminates their actual structure and funding.
One of the most clarifying comments comes from @samhusseini, who described repeatedly attempting to engage PSL-connected organizations around UN protest actions, specifically around using the “Uniting for Peace” mechanism to overcome the US veto, a campaign that Colombian President Gustavo Petro eventually pursued in September 2025. The response from PSL-aligned organizations was “always a brick wall.” Chambers’ reply is instructive:
100% and beyond these kinds of shady things, their insistence on gatekeeping or at least totally dominating anything they’re remotely involved in is part of what made me turn hard on them.
This is a crucial point. The problem is not simply one of organizational opacity or funding sources. It is a political method, one in which a centralized party apparatus presents itself through multiple seemingly independent faces, while systematically blocking, absorbing, or marginalizing any organizing efforts it does not control. This is not movement building. This is movement management.
@thestustustudio made a comment that is worth pausing on: “This picture is going to live rent-free in my head forever now. It’s honestly wild how closely it lines up with my own research on the Singham Network.” The Singham Network refers to the financial and organizational network connected to Neville Roy Singham, a tech millionaire whose funding connections to various left and socialist media and organizing projects have been a subject of significant investigative journalism. The alignment between PSL’s alleged organizational diagram and research into that network is a thread that independent press should continue pulling.
A separate but related post from @notXiangyu raises a pointed question directed at both PSL and The People’s Forum regarding their promotion of Kat Abughazaleh (D), a recently progressive candidate for Congress. The post asks why Abughazaleh is being “upheld as some fighter for socialism” given her stated position on “defending Taiwan,” which is code for the continued US use of Taiwan as a geopolitical wedge against the People’s Republic of China. Whether or not one agrees with that specific framing, the question illustrates a broader concern: if PSL-controlled organizations are platforming figures whose politics are inconsistent with anti-imperialism when it is inconvenient, that reveals something about how these PSL spaces function as political instruments rather than principled movement infrastructure.
The word “counterinsurgency” is used deliberately by Chambers, and it deserves to be taken seriously rather than dismissed as hyperbole. Counterinsurgency in the domestic political context does not require government direction. Co-optation, containment, and the management of radical energy within controlled channels are functions that can be performed by well-funded private organizations operating within social movements. The history of the US left is full of examples — from foundation-funded nonprofits that absorbed energy from militant labor organizing, to sectarian formations that built impressive-looking infrastructure while ensuring that no independent radical force could consolidate outside their control.
The question Chambers is raising, and that many in response are affirming from their own experience, is whether PSL and its network of affiliated organizations serve the function of absorbing, directing, and ultimately containing left political energy rather than building toward any genuine rupture with the existing order. @ThatKid1871 captured the absurdity of the dynamic with dry clarity: “Ben Becker and Vijay Prashad pitching socialist organizations to a rotating pool of ultraleft venture capitalists is such a funny image.” Funny, yes, but also a serious description of how organizational infrastructure on the left gets built and who it ends up serving.
@rainer_shea quoted Lenin in response, and it is worth sitting with:
Unity is a great thing and a great slogan. But what the workers’ cause needs is the unity of Marxists, not unity between Marxists, and opponents and distorters of Marxism.
The call for left unity is frequently weaponized to suppress exactly the kind of critical accountability being raised in this discussion. Genuine unity requires transparency about organizational structure, democratic accountability within organizations, and honest debate about political line. None of those things are served by a formation in which multiple organizations present themselves as independent while being controlled by a single party’s central committee.
The left does not need more managed spaces. It needs accountable ones.
This thread raises questions that cannot be answered by one post or one person’s account. They require collective investigation, honest conversation, and the willingness to follow evidence wherever it leads — even when it points at organizations and figures we have respected or relied upon.
Share your own experiences with PSL, …
… The People’s Forum, BreakThrough News, ANSWER Coalition, or any of the affiliated organizations described. Have you encountered the gate keeping dynamic described here? Have you seen these spaces function to absorb or redirect organizing energy? Have you been courted, pressured, or pushed out? Do you have information about the Singham Network connections or funding structures?
We cannot build what we need to build while navigating controlled infrastructure that we mistake for our own. The first step is naming what is in front of us clearly, specifically, and without flinching. Drop your thoughts, experiences, and research in the comments. This conversation is overdue.
All quotes in this article are drawn from the public X posts. Readers are encouraged to follow through to the original sources and assess the claims directly.





