Zohran Mamdani elected mayor of New York City

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I‘m betting that they try to do an Obama 2.0 with that Zohran Mamdani guy in New York in anticipation of the next presidential elections. And IMO it could work. I‘m expecting that they will push him increasingly to the foreground till then. The reporting about him not only in America but also in vassal states like Germany smells a lot like it IMO. Might be worthwhile to create a separate thread about that guy.

Edit: If so, it might be another indication that they don’t want J.D. Vance to succeed Trump.
 
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I begin this thread because I feel very sure of one thing. No matter what happens with Zohran Mamdani's policies in New York City, I'm sure we'll witness enormous spin, about every event, both to the positive and to the negative. I can imagine that it will reach extremes rarely seen because there seem to be so many people so deeply invested in his success and in his failure.

Here is his light, official bio from the official New York Assembly web site:

What concerned me about his Wikipedia bio (excerpt below) was the emphasis Mamdani has placed on Marxist/socialist principles, societal divisions, tribalism, etc. He has deliberately chosen to aid people based on what they look like, where they come from, or their belief systems alone. He has demonstrated this via committee memberships focusing narrowly on such division. Though he emphasizes his Muslim faith, he has courted identity groups that his religion tends to shun, such as the LGBTQ and transexual groups, which seems suspicious. These biases may not serve him well as a politician.

Mamdani joined the New York City chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) and worked for the campaign of New York City Council candidate Khader El-Yateem, a Palestinian Lutheran minister and democratic socialist... and was also a field organizer for fellow democratic socialist Tiffany Cabán's 2019 campaign for Queens County District Attorney...

(In the) New York State Assembly... he was endorsed by the DSA, running on a platform of housing reform, police and prison reform, and public ownership of utilities...

Mamdani is a member of the DSA's nine-member "State Socialists in Office" bloc in New York and a member of the Muslim Democratic Club of New York...

As of January 2025, Mamdani was a member of nine Assembly committees: the Committee on Aging; the Committee on Cities; the Committee on Election Law; the Committee on Energy; the Committee on Real Property Taxation; the Black, Puerto Rican, Hispanic & Asian Legislative Caucus; the Puerto Rican/Hispanic Task Force; the Asian Pacific American Task Force; and the Task Force on New Americans.
 
What concerned me about his Wikipedia bio (excerpt below) was the emphasis Mamdani has placed on Marxist/socialist principles, societal divisions, tribalism, etc. He has deliberately chosen to aid people based on what they look like, where they come from, or their belief systems alone. He has demonstrated this via committee memberships focusing narrowly on such division. Though he emphasizes his Muslim faith, he has courted identity groups that his religion tends to shun, such as the LGBTQ and transexual groups, which seems suspicious.

Indeed, concerning if true. On the other hand it has do be said that things like that are the usual naive beliefs and advocations of young people and/or democrats. And it often seems to be true that it is not so much what a person like that runs on or advocates that counts but how he is as a person and how he approaches things as soon as he is in power. For example, broadly speaking, just because someone is a democrat, republican etc. (insert any other monicker) doesn’t mean he or she has to turn out good or bad, in a black and white fashion, no matter what.
 
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Here comes enormous drama with all kinds of conflict like we don't have enough already. Much more attention is being given to the Moslem migration thats happened over the last few years as well which is another invasion scenario.
 
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Mamdani could be instrumental in America's next Civil War.
I think it is good to remember that civil war is what the cabal wants (regular people fighting each other), as in divide and conquer.

What the cabal does not want is a revolution against them and their bought, blackmailed or brainwashed minions in positions of power.
 
I watched Mamdani's victory speech because I'd heard that the warm persona gave way to a harsher, more strident one. The speech certainly moved in that direction as it went along. Basically, he sounded like every politician entering office, believing he'll have more power than he has (NYC has 300,000 employees, its own deep state).

Some quotes that strike me as incoherent:

- "The working people of New York have been told by the wealthy and well-connected that power does not belong in their hands."
Being from a rich and privileged family, he is living proof of that.

"Tonight, against all odds, we have grasped it. The future is in our hands... We will fight for you because we are you."
He implies that he is among NY's working class.

- "We have toppled a political dynasty... the politics that abandons the many and answers only to the few... Tonight you have delivered a mandate for change."
The only dynasty he could be referring to is Democratic Party mayors of NYC for the past twelve years. This suggests that he is a Democrat in name only.

- He thanks "people who made this movement their own," citing Yemenis, Mexicans, Senegalese, Uzbeks, Trinidadians, and Ethiopians. "There are many... who feared we would be condemned only to a future of less."
He built up a divisive "we" immigrants versus native citizens over the course of the speech, but later stated that his government will "help everyone."

- "Safety and justice... we will create a Department of Community Safety that tackles the mental-health and homelessness crises head on."
He has been both on and off the "defund the police" movement. He has called police racist. He has questioned, on video, the purpose of jails and prisons and suggested elimination of all misdemeanor charges in NYC. He eventually backed away from open antagonization of police. He opposes federal immigration law. He has called violence a social construct and an artificial construct.

- "Excellence will become the expectation across government, not the exception."
Although Mamdani avoids the term "DEI" (which has fallen out of favor since Trump's election), he has pledged support for "equity." See this article, which describes his plan to phase out "gifted and talented programs" in NYC schools, which critics say will trade merit for equity and bring the excellent down (equity is much easier to approach when favoring the lowest common denominator). DEI principles explicitly de-prioritize excellence.

- "We will refuse those who traffic in division and hate to pit us against one another."
But he is openly divisive and pitting us vs. them.

- "We believe in standing up for those we love, whether you are an immigrant, a member of the trans community, one of the many black women that Donald Trump has fired from a federal job, a single mom still waiting for the cost of groceries to go down..."
Again, promoting some rather than all residents. When has the price of groceries ever gone down?

- "We will build a city that stands steadfast alongside Jewish New Yorkers and does not waver in the fight against the scourge of antisemitism, where the more than one million Muslims know that they belong, not just within the five boroughs of this city, but in the halls of power. No more will New York be a city where you can traffic in islamophobia and win an election."
Like many, he wishes to divorce anti-Israel sentiment from anti-Jewish sentiment, which is perfectly legitimate, but typically fails in the current political climate. Article: More than 1,000 US rabbis join letter raising concerns about Zohran Mamdani and Israel. He seems to suggest that Islam is not anti-Jewish. So, he is walking a metaphorical tightrope here.

- "This new age will be defined by a competence and a compassion that have too long been placed at odds with one another... on January 1st we will usher in a city government that helps everyone." And later, "We will leave mediocrity in our past."
Again, how to do that and actively promote equity?

- "...billionaires... we refuse to let them dictate the rules of the game anymore... we can respond to oligarchy and authoritarianism with the strength it fears... And if there is any way to terrify a despot, it is by dismantling the very conditions that allowed him to accumulate power."
What are those conditions? It is commonly cited that the top 10% of taxpayers in NY state fund 70% of government spending due to existing progressive taxation. Increasing taxation of job creators is commonly criticized as anti-business, which must eventually shrink the job market. He has made "the cost of living crisis" the central plank of his platform, and talks a lot about prices. But, I have never heard him talk about creating jobs. Rather, as CNN reported on November 4, "He has also proposed a tax on the city’s wealthiest residents and an increase in the city’s corporate tax rate to pay for his policy ideas..." By the same tax increases, he plans to offer free buses and free child care for all NYC children aged six weeks to five years. Critics says this is unaffordable, especially when New York City needs state approval in order to increase local income taxes, and Gov. Kathy Hochul has been steadfast in her opposition to the prospect of increasing income taxes.

- "We will hold landlords to account, because the Donald Trumps of our city have grown far too comfortable taking advantage of their tenants."
Rent control has be observed to promote decay of buildings, lowering property values and living standards. There is much economic scholarship on this, much of which cites short-term gains for tenants, but long-term losses for property owners, who eventually stop renting. In extreme cases, cases of arson increase.

- "New York will remain a city of immigrants, built by immigrants, powered by immigrants, and as of tonight, led by an immigrant."
Again, us vs. them. Promoting some, not all.

- "Success... will be felt when New Yorkers open their newspapers in the morning and read headlines of success not scandal."
Almost sounds like he expects the support of a sympathetic press. Likely true if he is thinking about the New York Times.
 
Someone pointed out on Twitter the crazy irony that almost the day Dick Cheney died, one of the architects of 9/11 and the killing spree of Muslims, a Muslim gets elected as mayor of NYC! It's a form of sick torture, really: you blame the Muslims for everything, tell everyvody how evil they are, set the ME on fire, then bombard the West with migrants while gaslighting people who notice the obvious society-degeading consequences of said mass migration and calling them racists. What a mind job.
 
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