
The mad world vision inside zohran mamdani’s head
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The mayor of New York City is a figure of national importance, even though no one in the past century has risen from City Hall to play a meaningful role in American politics. Why? Because
New York City is the canary in the coal mine for ideas about how to govern. When bad ideas are enacted here, they spread like the Spanish flu and sicken the rest of America. And when good
ones come along, like the policies that ended the crime wave in the 1990s, they spread like sunshine on a cloudless morning and brighten the daily lives of the entire country. So it’s not
just because New York is the center of the universe (which it is) that its mayors matter. It’s that what happens here reverberates. And right now, what seems to be reverberating as New
York’s Democrats prepare for their June mayoral primary is Zohran Mamdani. Mamdani has risen from complete obscurity to second in the polls (albeit 20 points behind leader Andrew Cuomo) and
has raised an astounding $9 million-plus. MORE FROM JOHN PODHORETZ That makes Mamdani the breakthrough star of the Democratic Party so far this year. And that’s pretty amazing, because this
33 year-old nobody state representative is an out-and-out utopian lunatic. He wants to freeze all rents, have the government run grocery stores, and make both child care and transit bus free
for all. How would this work in practice? Oh, don’t be a stickler! Get on board the free bus! Indeed, Mamdami is so pure in his ideological vision that he evokes one of socialism’s crackpot
founders, Charles Fourier (1782-1837). Fourier had a plan to reorganize the Earth into a series of exactly equal-in-size-and-money communal farms called “phalansteries” in which happy
children would do the work of contented adults and the resulting social harmony would literally transform the oceans into lemonade we could all drink. How would this all work? Never mind
how! Just drink the Kool-Aid — I mean, the lemonade! The glory was in the doing — the process of creating the new order Fourier called Harmony, in which social conflict would disappear and
wealth would rain down equally upon everyone. This vision of a society run from the top down to eliminate all human conflict — OR ELSE — led more practical radicals of his time to think
about what they could do to bring about this revolution in consciousness. This effort began in earnest in the publication of “The Communist Manifesto” in 1848 — and came to its conclusion
following the slaughter of more than 100 million people under the yoke of totalitarian socialism by the time the Berlin Wall fell nearly 150 years later. So by all means, let’s bring it to
New York City in 2026! Simply this: The policy proposals Mamdani is running on will be literally impossible to enact — but if enacted, would turn the city into an economic and social
hellhole so fast, we would long for the days when our greatest fear was being pushed onto a subway track by a schizophrenic. What do I mean by comparing Mamdani to Fourier? At various
turning points in the city’s history since the 1960s, we have been presented with a choice. The choice is between reality and delusion. In reality, New York is a mess desperately in need of
practical solutions to make an increasingly unlivable city livable again. The delusion is that this can be affected by increasing the power of the incompetent, corrupt and foolish city
government and its workforce. Mamdani, whose father is a radical professor at Columbia (oh, great) and whose mother is a has-been movie director who boycotts Israel, gets his middle name
from Kwame Nkrumah, a progressive anti-colonial African politician. Nkrumah was democratically elected in 1957, but, big surprise, by 1964 had turned his country of Ghana into a one-party
dictatorship with himself as “president for life” before he was justifiably deposed. Zohran Mamdani is the inheritor of bad ideas from the 19th century, is named for a socialist totalitarian
from the 20th century, is the child of a 21st-century antisemite, and wants to bring all of this to bear in New York City in 2026. I have an idea: Let’s not let him. _John Podhoretz is the
editor of Commentary Magazine._