0:00
/
0:00

🚯 Radical DSA Socialist Democrat Zohran Mamdani co-founded SJP on Campus

Nothing says “rooting out bigotry” like your political director being a Luigi Mangione fan boy and screaming “globalize the intifada”.

Zohran Mamdani, the 33-year-old Democratic Socialist who stunned New York by defeating Andrew Cuomo in the 2025 mayoral primary, is no ordinary politician. He’s a firebrand with a vision to remake New York City into a progressive utopia, but his policies and past statements are raising alarms, especially among moms who value family autonomy, economic stability, and free speech.

Share Breaking News & Alerts

Radical DSA Socialist Democrat Zohran Mamdani pledges to "root out bigotry" across NYC with an "800% increase in funding for hate crime prevention programs."

He wants to fund a bunch of Marxist to run around and blame everyone of hurting feeling of some deranged Nazis. Nothing says “rooting out bigotry” like your political director being a Luigi Mangione fan boy and screaming “globalize the intifada”.

What is going on in New York? White leftists made Zohran happen!

From pushing $65 million for gender-affirming care for kids to vowing to “root out bigotry” with a massive funding hike, Mamdani’s agenda is bold, divisive, and, for many, downright dangerous. Let’s peel back the curtain on the man who wants to lead the Big Apple and expose what his plans mean for New York’s families.

Zohran's Radical Ideas

Breaking News & Alerts is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Zohran Mamdani won the New York Democratic mayoral primary this week and instantly became the darling of people who think quoting Hamas slogans on TikTok qualifies as political analysis. The slogan of the night? “Globalize the intifada,” a phrase that manages to be both morally bankrupt and intellectually lazy.

Mamdani didn’t say it himself. He just refused to condemn it. Repeatedly. Because in 2025, that’s how you stay cool with the clout-chasing radicals who pass for activists in this party. Being aggressively vague is the new brave. It’s a calculated non-position that lets you flirt with extremism while pretending you’re just being misunderstood.

The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum didn’t misunderstand him. It issued a blistering statement slamming Mamdani’s moral cowardice. Not that it mattered. The celebration kept going, and the phrase kept echoing through the echo chamber.

.Mohammed El-Kurd, the poet laureate of antisemitic hot takes, wasted no time basking in the moment. “Consider the intifada globalized,” he posted with the smugness of a man who’s never had to live with the consequences of his slogans. El-Kurd has cheered on terrorists, romanticized the Second Intifada, and once said we should “normalize massacres” at a rally. He makes violence sound like slam poetry and somehow still gets paid for it.

Then came Hasan Piker, Twitch’s favorite fake Marxist. “Its white boy jihad summer,” he wrote, because there’s no crisis he won’t turn into a meme. Piker is the kind of guy who calls himself anti-imperialist while livestreaming in a $3 million West Hollywood mansion. He’s said America deserved 9/11 and hand-waved away rape during Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre. He also thinks killing landlords is a punchline. This is Mamdani’s fan base.

UMass Boston professor Jeff Melnick chimed in too. “Maybe this will be a tiny little turn against the Zionist colonization of our speech, our elections, our everything,” he wrote. Translation: Finally, a win for people who think Israeli existence is the real problem. Melnick has spent years describing Israel as an apartheid state, supporting the BDS movement, and generally sounding like a Reddit thread that went on too long.

Steven Thrasher, who teaches “social justice in journalism” at Northwestern, added his own “globalize the intifada” to the pile. He helped lead a pro-Hamas encampment last year, tangled with campus police, gave a speech about American empire on the school lawn, and then failed to get tenure because his teaching was, in the dean’s words, inadequate.

.These are the people cheering for Mamdani. These are the voices amplified by his win. Not housing advocates. Not local organizers. Not New Yorkers who want cleaner trains or safer streets. No, his base is a toxic cocktail of rage influencers, campus radicals, and professional grievance merchants.

And Mamdani knows it. That’s the worst part. He knows exactly who these people are. He sees the slogans, the tweets, the bloodlust disguised as solidarity. And he smiles. Says nothing. Let it all slide. Because for him, extremism isn’t a bug—it’s a feature

.

Thanks for reading Breaking News & Alerts! This post is public so feel free to share it.

Share

Now he’s the Democratic nominee for mayor. His general election opponents—Eric Adams, now an independent, and Curtis Sliwa, still cosplaying as a vigilante 40 years past his expiration date—might not be inspiring, but at least neither of them has a cheering section calling for a worldwide violent uprising.

Andrew Cuomo, still clinging to his third-party fantasy, looked washed even before Mamdani beat him. If he drops out, Mamdani is one election away from running the biggest city in America.

The man who won’t say whether “globalize the intifada” is a genocidal chant or just a vibe might soon control the NYPD, the budget, and the platform of a lifetime.

Congratulations, New York. You might be getting your first mayor who thinks terror slogans are open to interpretation.

Breaking News & Alerts is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Discussion about this video