Zohran Mamdani stands by President Trump criticism despite friendly White House meeting

WASHINGTON New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani didn’t back down in an interview that aired Sunday from past criticism that President Donald Trump acted like a despot and a fascist after a surprisingly friendly White House meeting between the two men. The newly elected democratic socialist and the Republican president have fiercely criticized each other in the past. Trump called Mamdani a “100% Communist Lunatic” in a social media post following the incoming mayor’s election victory, and Mamdani has said Trump was attacking democracy. Yet the two political foils emerged smiling after the meeting Friday and spoke of shared goals. Pressed about his past criticism during a “Meet the Press” interview conducted Saturday, Mamdani said his views remained unchanged. “Everything that I’ve said in the past, I continue to believe,” Mamdani said. “And that’s the thing that I think is important in our politics, is that we don’t shy away from where we have disagreements, but we understand what it is that brings us to that table, because I’m not coming into the Oval Office to make a point or make a stand. I’m coming in there to deliver for New Yorkers.” Trump had brushed aside Mamdani’s criticisms Friday and even jumped in on his defense several times. When a reporter asked if Mamdani stood by his comments that Trump is a fascist, Trump interjected before Mamdani could fully answer the question. “That’s OK. You can just say yes. OK?” Trump said. “It’s easier. It’s easier than explaining it. I don’t mind.” Asked about the fascist criticism on “Meet the Press,” Mamdani said, “That’s something that I’ve said in the past. I say it today. ” Kevin Hassett, director of the National Economic Council, said on CNN’s “State of the Union” talk show that Trump wants to work with everybody who cares about the future of the American people. “We’re at times disagreeing about policies,” Hassett said, “but I think that the objective of making life better for everybody is something that a lot of people share on the Democratic and Republican side.” Though far apart politically, the White House meeting offered potential political benefits for both men. The incoming mayor was able to meet one-on-one with the president, and Trump got to to talk about affordability, an issue that is increasingly important to voters.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/23/mamdani-trump-criticism/

The Real Problem With Higher Education And the real engine behind socialism’s resurgence. by Bruce Thornton

The seemingly growing popularity of socialism, and the election of socialist Zohran Mamdani as New York City’s new mayor, have led billionaire Peter Thiel to reprise a 2020 email that explained with “a simple theory” why millennials are attracted to socialism, and down on capitalism. It seems that loads of student loan debt, and exorbitant prices for houses have kept them from achieving the American dream of earlier generations. “If you proletarianize the young people, you shouldn’t be surprised if they eventually become communist,” Thiel told the Free Press. This analysis is superficial and oddly simplistic about what has happened to higher education, which has nothing to do with capitalism “proletarianizing” students–it’s pure bathos, by the way, to describe some of the most privileged young people in history as “proletarians.” For instance, take the complaint about student loans. They were federalized and politicized by Barack Obama, leading to programs and regulations that ignore fiscal responsibility and common sense–the very dysfunctions that created our federal entitlements’ drunken-sailor largess that has led to more and more money spent on entitlements. Indeed, currently we spend more on entitlements than on our military, and on servicing the growing interest on this mountain of debt that will have to be paid for by our grandchildren and their grandchildren. Not even the rapacious demagogues of ancient Athens thought to redistribute the wealth of the unborn. So, how did those students amass so much debt? Aren’t they adults responsible for their bad decisions, including the choice of trendy, useless majors with little value on the job market? Do we think it’s rapacious capitalism’s fault when a spendthrift can’t repay his loan for an expensive car? Or is it justice to strong-arm the dealer to post facto to lower the price, or coerce the bank that loaned the money to reduce the interest rate? But aren’t those adult borrowers the victims of inflated tuition? That’s not capitalism’s fault, given that under Obana student loans create an opportunity for universities with gigantic, tax-free endowments to raise tuition costs and milk the corrupt student loan racket. Making the universities contribute to paying off students’ bloated loans would make more sense and be more just than blaming some cartoon caricature of our free-market economy. The bigger problem with Thiel’s “theory” is that it misses the dysfunctional changes over the last fifty years that have damaged our universities’ legitimate purpose. The cultural Marxist “long march” through the institutions has gradually politicized universities with Marxist ideology, which in turn opened the way for the “higher nonsense”: Postmodernism and poststructuralist ideologies–the idiot bastards of Marx’s malign ideas like “false consciousness” — that have also infected the university with other sophistic ideas such as simplistic, radical materialist determinism and juvenile relativism. All these preposterous ideological sophistries have polluted the universities’ core mission of liberal education–to equip students with free minds and truths necessary for political freedom. They’ve been replaced with the noxious notion that everything we believe is real, good, and true are mere illusory “constructs” serving the plutocratic’ selfish powers of capitalism. The result ensures that the citizenry taught by families, churches, schools, tradition, virtues, and morality, are now trained to believe themselves to be victims of “false consciousness.” And so, rather than free, they believe they are mere dupes conditioned by “the man” to accept the “lie” that capitalism and free markets, merit and hard work, create and distribute wealth more widely and justly than collectivism, redistribution of others’ money, dirigiste economic policies, and the unjust equality of outcome. Postmodern ideology, moreover, adds radical epistemic relativism to this toxic Marxist brew– the lie that meaning, facts, knowledge, truth, rights, morality, even personal identity itself, are mere “constructs,” minions serving the power of those who own and shape the means of production. Their aim is to justify and mystify the oppressive social, political, and economic power and privilege of the capitalist hegemony. And, of course, our universities have demonized Western Civilization with the chimeras of false consciousness now distorting the foundations of Western Civilization–rationalism, our Judeo-Christian inheritance, freedom, equality, and democracy. Our universities have redefined and replaced these foundations with “toxic masculinity,” metastasizing “phobias,” and “white supremacy” –all the seeds of racism, and predatory, genocidal “settler colonialism” and imperialism. We saw the fruits of these big lies on October 7, 2023, in the despicable protests from students in some of our most prestigious universities in support of terrorist murderers of Israelis and Jews. Not just supporting the butchers, but also chanting vile antisemitic, genocidal slogans like “from the river to the sea” and “globalize the intifada,” –a favorite of New York City’s new communist mayor and champion of jihadists. Most damning for our universities is the failure to teach their charges that the Marxism and postmodernism preached in their courses have little or no empirical evidence to support their claims, and few, if any, sound arguments to recommend these ideologies that are internally incoherent. If “truth,” for example, is merely a fable of malign power and its “discourses” that no one can escape, then why should we believe the magical economics of Karl Marx, or the juvenile, epistemic nihilism of Jacques Derrida or Michel Foucault? Aren’t these poststructuralist malignant fads just more “constructs,” an invention of pampered, privileged academic savants sawing off the civilizational branch they’re sitting on? George Orwell knew where such fantasies lead. Speaking of the West and its cultural degeneration into utopian political fantasies, and the failure of civilizational nerve in 1940 after the appeasement of Hitler ignited World War II, Orwell wrote that “for two centuries we had sawed and sawed and sawed at the branch we were sitting on.” But when the branch finally broke, it didn’t land us “in a bed of roses,” but a “cesspit full of barbed wire” –a fitting description of utopian communism and its cesspit of mass slaughter, show trials, and dehumanizing gulags. Finally, the popularity of communism and its knock-down socialism have been influencing our culture and politics for over a century, and left residues in our institutions, culture high and low, and and government that reached its apogee in the presidency of Barak Obama and his ambition to “fundamentally transform the United States.” That sentiment has the ring of Progressive movement that began over a century ago. It was filled with ideas and political ambitions that started with communism and socialism. This movement begat our political Progressivism. Especially influential has been its displeasure with the Constitution and its balanced and divided powers, and unalienable rights codified in the Bill of Rights. President Woodrow Wilson, the academic godfather of the Progressive movement, was vocal about his dislike of the Constitution and its empowerment of ordinary people, instead preferring technocracy and rule not by We the People, but by a “public bureau.” As Wilson wrote, our government needed “a public bureau skilled in economical administration,” one comprising the “hundreds who are wise” given the power to guide and control the thousands who are “selfish, timid, stubborn, or foolish” — a contrast that still defines and separates our two political parties and their policies, administered by bloated, politicized Federal agencies that even with Donald Trump’s pruning are still creating expensive and tyrannical mischief. But we don’t have to go back to the Progressives to see the influence of communism and its baleful effects. In 1976, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, in his speech “If One Doesn’t Want to Be Blind,” compared our political culture and ideology to those of Soviet-era Russians who were living through communism’s bloody tyranny: “What we see [in the West] . is still the same [as the Soviet Union]: the universal reverence of adult society for the opinion of children; the feverish infatuation, on the part of many young people, with vanishingly worthless ideas; the timorousness of professors to find themselves outside the latest trends; the failures of journalists to take responsibility for the words they fling so readily; the universal sympathy for revolutionary extremists; the muteness of people with serious objections; the passive defeatism of the majority; the feebleness of governments and the paralysis of society’s defense mechanisms; the spiritual dismay leading to political cataclysm.” Finally, the bacillus of leftism has spread and colonized our institutions for at least a century, making “school loans” and “expensive” houses superfluous, if not irrelevant, for explaining the fad of socialism among our young. If we want to slow down that fad, we should support President Trump’s efforts to reform the corrupt institutions of our universities. Comments are closed.
http://www.ruthfullyyours.com/2025/11/22/the-real-problem-with-higher-education-and-the-real-engine-behind-socialisms-resurgence-by-bruce-thornton/

Fedora-wearing bicyclist who scrawled swastikas at NYC yeshiva caught on video

Disturbing surveillance video has captured a mysterious bike-riding vandal who painted swastikas at a Brooklyn yeshiva early Wednesday morning, just hours after socialist Zohran Mamdani’s mayoral win.

The footage shows a single figure wearing a wide-brimmed hat pedaling up to the Magen David Yeshiva in Gravesend around 6:30 a.m. The individual stops briefly to scrawl hateful graffiti before riding off.

“In light of the results from the election last night, everybody is super sensitive, and we’re afraid that this is going to be the new norm, where these people are going to be emboldened and think that they can get away with it,” Bob Moskiwitz, dispatcher for Flatbush Shomrim Patrol, told The Post.

“First of all, it’s hate graffiti,” he said. “I don’t care if it was on a mailbox or on a light pole—we would look into that, too. But here you have a predominantly Jewish neighborhood, a Jewish school with massive attendance. This is one of the largest schools in the community, and it’s very traumatic for the entire community.”

The hateful act came just hours after Mamdani, a Muslim and social Democrat, comfortably beat former Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the mayoral race. This victory has sparked concern among some New Yorkers who are wary of the mayor-elect’s purported anti-Israeli rhetoric.

“It’s not a coincidence that this happened hours after Mamdani won the election,” one yeshiva parent said. “Anyone who claims that it is is lying to themselves or having delusions. This was a statement that with the new boss in charge, we finally get to show our true colors.” He referred to it as a sign of “Mamdani’s New York.”

Moskiwitz said the patrol received a call about the graffiti roughly half an hour after the incident. Two swastikas were painted on the main building and two more on the window of an adjoining building. The patrol then notified the NYPD.

The school responded by washing the swastikas off the windows and taping
https://nypost.com/2025/11/05/us-news/fedora-wearing-bicyclist-who-scrawled-swastikas-at-nyc-yeshiva-caught-on-video/

CNN’s Van Jones among those raising alarm at Mamdani’s instant ‘character switch’ after winning power

Lefty luminary Van Jones was among those raising alarm at Democratic socialist mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s rage-filled victory speech, noting his instant “character switch” upon winning power.

A roaring Mamdani wasted no time claiming a mandate for his potentially budget-busting progressive agenda, even taunting former President Donald Trump as he rallied his fired-up supporters soon after Tuesday night’s victory.

Jones was quick to point out live on CNN that the 34-year-old’s triumphant demeanor was a far cry from the cool, calm, and collected candidate seen on the campaign trail.

“I think he missed an opportunity. I think the Mamdani that we saw on the campaign trail, who was a lot more calm, who was a lot warmer, who was a lot more embracing, was not present in that speech,” Jones told a post-election CNN panel.

“I think his tone was sharp. I think he was using the microphone in a way that he was almost yelling. That’s not the Mamdani that we’ve seen on TikTok and in the great interviews and stuff like that.”

“I felt like it was a little bit of a character switch here,” he continued, noting that the once “warm, open, embracing guy” had seemingly vanished.

The Democratic pundit, who served as an adviser in the Obama administration, suggested Mamdani would have been better off trying to appease New Yorkers who are wary of his agenda.

“There are a lot of people trying to figure out, ‘Can I get on this train with him or not? Is he going to include me? Is he going to be more of a class warrior even in office?’ I think he missed a chance tonight to open up and bring more people into the tent,” Jones said.

“He’s very young and he just pulled off something very, very difficult. I wouldn’t write him off, but I think he missed an opportunity to open himself up tonight and I think that that will probably cost him going forward.”

Mamdani, who will be New York City’s first Muslim, first South Asian, and first socialist mayor, declared victory about two hours after polls closed.

The Democrat carried 50.4% of the votes to independent candidate Andrew Cuomo’s 42%, with nearly 98% of precincts reporting, according to the city Board of Elections.

“The conventional wisdom would tell you that I am far from the perfect candidate. I am young, despite my best efforts to grow older. I am Muslim. I am a democratic socialist. And most damning of all, I refuse to apologize for any of this,” Mamdani declared during his 20-minute victory speech.

“New York, tonight you have delivered a mandate for change, a mandate for a new kind of politics, a mandate for a city that we can afford, and a mandate for a government that delivers exactly that.”
https://nypost.com/2025/11/05/media/cnns-van-jones-among-those-raising-alarm-at-zohran-mamdanis-instant-character-switch-after-winning-nyc-mayoral-race/

Socialist NYC Mayoral Candidate Mamdani Faces Two Criminal Investigations [WATCH]

**NYC Mayoral Candidate Zohran Mamdani Faces Criminal Referrals Over Foreign Contributions Allegations**

New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani is facing two criminal referrals following allegations that his campaign accepted nearly $13,000 in contributions from donors with foreign addresses, potentially violating federal and local election laws.

The complaints, filed on October 28, 2025, by the Coolidge Reagan Foundation (CRF), indicate that Mamdani’s campaign received at least 170 donations totaling about $13,000 from contributors listing addresses outside the United States. These addresses spanned locations including Australia, Canada, Dubai, France, Germany, and Turkey.

Among the flagged donations was a $500 contribution from Mamdani’s mother-in-law, a pediatrician based in Dubai, which was refunded within four days of being made in January 2025. Another notable donation was a $2,100 contribution in September 2025 from an investor also located in Dubai.

Dan Backer, President of CRF, described the data as revealing a “sustained pattern” of questionable contributions. “This was a sustained pattern of foreign money flowing into a New York City mayoral race, which is a clear violation of both federal law and New York City campaign finance rules,” Backer stated. He added that refunds issued post-donation do not negate potential violations. “The totality of the circumstances indicates likely illegal contributions, even if some donors might be U.S. citizens or green-card holders living abroad,” he said.

Under the Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA), foreign nationals—defined as individuals who are neither U.S. citizens nor lawful permanent residents—are prohibited from contributing to any U.S. election. These restrictions extend to state and local races as well. Knowingly accepting or soliciting such donations can lead to penalties including fines and imprisonment.

The CRF’s referral to the Department of Justice asserts that Mamdani’s campaign failed to properly vet donors and that the volume of foreign-linked contributions warrants a criminal investigation.

As of mid-October 2025, campaign finance records show Mamdani’s team refunded 91 contributions totaling $5,723.50. However, 88 additional donations amounting to about $7,190 had not yet been returned at the time of reporting.

Shaun McCutcheon, Chairman of CRF, called the donations a “threat to self-government” and urged immediate prosecution, emphasizing that foreign money in U.S. elections “undermines public confidence in the democratic process.”

The Mamdani campaign acknowledged the donations but denied any wrongdoing. Campaign spokesperson Dora Pekec stated that all contributions were reviewed through “a rigorous compliance process.” She emphasized that federal, state, and city laws permit U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents living abroad to donate.

“The Campaign has a rigorous compliance process in place,” Pekec said. “Refunds have and will be made.”

According to the campaign, 31 of the 170 questioned donors provided documentation proving U.S. citizenship or permanent residency. The New York City Campaign Finance Board (CFB) determined their contributions were permissible. The remaining 139 donations were refunded.

“Any issue regarding financial contributions has been resolved,” the campaign said in a written statement. “We will, of course, return any donations that are not in compliance with CFB law.”

These allegations come just days before Tuesday’s mayoral election, where Mamdani, a self-described socialist and state assemblyman from Queens, is heavily favored to win. His campaign has reported raising $4 million in private donations and qualifying for $12.7 million in public matching funds under New York City’s campaign finance program.

Mamdani’s opponents include Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa and former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, who is running as an independent after losing to Mamdani in the Democratic primary earlier this year. Both challengers have called for greater scrutiny of campaign fundraising practices and transparency in donor reporting.
https://www.lifezette.com/2025/11/socialist-nyc-mayoral-candidate-mamdani-faces-two-criminal-investigations-watch/

Mamdani’s Speech About Being Muslim Resonates Beyond New York City

A video of a recent address by Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic mayoral candidate, has gained significant attention online.

To date, it has been viewed more than 25 million times, highlighting widespread public interest in his message and campaign.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/31/nyregion/mamdanis-speech-about-being-muslim-resonates-beyond-new-york-city.html

John Rocker blasts Big Apple again with Zohran Mamdani favored to win mayoral election: ‘F–k New York’

New York City’s mayoral election seems to have only reinforced John Rocker’s negative feelings about the Big Apple. The former Braves relief pitcher took to X on Tuesday to voice his opinion on the state of the race, in which democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani is favored to win.

Rocker, who made headlines with his incendiary comments about New York during a Sports Illustrated interview in 1999, once again expressed his dislike of the city.

“25 years ago I criticized New York for its rapid decline into a third world country,” Rocker began his post. “I was forced to undergo psychological counseling, as if I were the crazy one. 25 years later, the city is voting in a Muslim socialist for mayor. F-K NEW YORK.”

During his 1999 interview with journalist Jeff Pearlman, Rocker didn’t hold back his disdain for New York and its residents. He bashed New York and Mets fans and openly expressed his discomfort with “foreigners.”

“I’d retire first. It’s the most hectic, nerve-wracking city,” Rocker said when asked if he’d ever play in New York. “Imagine having to take the 7 Train to the ballpark looking like you’re riding through Beirut next to some kid with purple hair, next to some queer with AIDS, right next to some dude who just got out of jail for the fourth time, right next to some 20-year-old mom with four kids. It’s depressing.”

He continued: “The biggest thing I don’t like about New York are the foreigners. You can walk an entire block in Times Square and not hear anybody speaking English. Asians and Koreans and Vietnamese and Indians and Russians and Spanish people and everything up there. How the hell did they get in this country?”

Following widespread backlash to the article, Rocker publicly apologized and was mandated by MLB to undergo psychiatric counseling before being suspended for 28 games—a ban that was later reduced by half.

When the Braves came to New York for the first time during the 2000 season, hundreds of NYPD officers provided extra security at a packed Shea Stadium. Many angry fans were ready to voice their displeasure toward Rocker.

In June of this year, Rocker recalled that game on social media, sharing a message similar to his recent post about the election.

“25 years ago today I pitched at Shea Stadium for the first time since the Sports Illustrated article released,” he wrote on X. “More than 700 NYPD were on site. Police escorted one person out of the stadium for throwing a beer bottle at me. We ended up winning that game. F-K NEW YORK.”
https://nypost.com/2025/10/28/sports/john-rocker-blasts-nyc-again-with-zohran-mamdani-favored-to-win-mayoral-election/

Early voting for NYC mayoral election, other races and ballot proposals officially begins — here’s what to know

The Race Is On: Early Voting Kicks Off in New York City

Early voting in New York City begins at 9 a.m. on Saturday, giving New Yorkers the opportunity to cast their ballots in the hotly contested mayoral race. The candidates include Democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani, Republican Curtis Sliwa, and former Governor Andrew Cuomo, who is running as an independent.

But the mayoral race isn’t the only contest on the ballot. Voters will also be selecting a new City Comptroller and Public Advocate, as well as borough presidents, district attorneys, city council members, and justices. Here’s everything you need to know about casting your vote ahead of Election Day.

### What Are the Dates and Hours for Early Voting?

Early voting starts 10 days before Election Day, which is Tuesday, November 4. Registered voters can cast their ballots during the nine days of early voting at their designated polling places.

– **October 25 – October 27:** 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
– **October 28 – October 29:** 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
– **October 30:** 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
– **October 31:** 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
– **November 1 – November 2:** 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

### How to Find Your Polling Place

Voters can locate their closest polling site on the New York City Board of Elections website. Simply enter your address and zip code to be directed to your local polling location.

### Are Early Voting Polling Sites Different from Election Day Locations?

Sometimes. Many Election Day polling sites are housed in public schools, which are typically unavailable during early voting periods. To check whether your early voting site differs from your Election Day location, visit the city Board of Elections website where both options will be listed.

### When Is the Voter Registration Deadline?

The voter registration deadline is today! To confirm your registration status or register to vote, visit the appropriate online portal without delay.

### Do You Need Identification to Vote?

Voters are required to have a New York ID to cast their ballots; however, registered voters do not always need to show ID at the polling site unless they did not provide identification when they registered.

Acceptable forms of ID for those who must present them include:

– A current and valid photo ID, such as a driver’s license
– A copy of a current utility bill, bank statement, government check, paycheck, or another government document showing your name and address

First-time voters who have not provided ID by Election Day can still vote using an affidavit ballot, though they will not be able to use the polling site’s scanner.

### What Else Is on the Ballot?

Besides the mayoral election, New Yorkers will vote in several other important races:

– **City-wide offices:** Public Advocate and City Comptroller
– **Borough offices:** Borough Presidents and District Attorneys
– **Local offices:** City Council members and district judges

Additionally, there are six ballot proposals asking voters to weigh in on issues such as the housing crisis and scheduling of local elections.

You can view a sample version of your specific ballot online to familiarize yourself with what to expect.

### Is the Mayoral Election Still Using Ranked-Choice Voting?

No. Ranked-choice voting is only employed during primary and special elections. This general mayoral election will not use the ranked-choice voting method.

Make sure to participate in early voting or prepare for Election Day — your vote matters!
https://nypost.com/2025/10/25/us-news/early-voting-for-nyc-mayoral-election-other-races-and-ballot-proposals-officially-begins-heres-what-to-know/

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