Inside Job A Color Revolution, Domesticated
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Inside Job: Color Revolution at Home is the documentary record of a methodology — and of the people now applying it inside the United States.
Civil-resistance doctrine — developed across four decades by scholars including Erica Chenoweth, Maria J. Stephan, Gene Sharp, and Hardy Merriman, and deployed through institutions including the Albert Einstein Institution, the National Endowment for Democracy, and the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict — has been the principal American export to opposition movements abroad since 1983. It brought down Milošević in 2000, Shevardnadze in 2003, Yanukovych in 2004.
In 2025, the same methodology was deployed against the elected government of the United States.
Across eighteen chapters and four appendices, journalist and legal analyst Tore (Terpsehore Maras) walks the institutional architecture in operational detail:
The strategic-center principals at Branch4, the Federal Unionists Network, and the Horizons Project
The fiscal-sponsorship architecture through ACRE Institute, Arabella Advisors, and the Sixteen Thirty Fund
The $2 billion-per-year consolidated funding ecosystem, including the $245 million Wyss pipeline and the $1.6 billion Marble Freedom Trust on the structurally parallel right
The Congressional Federal Workforce Caucus, launched February 4, 2026, with twenty-three lawmakers — 73.9% anchored in the Maryland-Virginia-DC federal-workforce corridor
The forty-three-day federal shutdown of October-November 2025
The three No Kings demonstrations — five million, seven million, eight million participants — approaching Chenoweth's 3.5 percent inflection threshold
The Peters Doctrine: the prosecutorial framework, articulated in Peters v. Feyen, that has criminalized the preservation of election evidence while leaving the deployment itself unaddressed
The book carries the full scholarly apparatus a serious investigative nonfiction requires: a six-predicate referral framework for federal investigative offices, a complete chronology, a Bluebook table of authorities, a glossary, and a selected bibliography.
The author is the lead amici curiae in Peters v. Feyen on behalf of herself and approximately three thousand fifty-seven American citizen co-signatories. She has disclosed that position in the body of the manuscript.
What this book offers is not a thesis. It is a documented record, structured to be verified.
"It's not the story they tell you that is important. It's what they omit."
The Unedited History Project ·