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The devil Cheney died today, mayor is now Muslim of one of the most influential cities in the modern world- same city after 24 years since 9/11 which same Cheney that died today used as an excuse to enter the Middle East and shed blood there and when anti Muslim sentiment was at its peak. Which person in the world would have thought then that the mayor in a few years would be Muslim?
tide can turn very fast. 24 years is nothing in the context of human history let alone world history.
Indians are definitely making their mark in US politics now, every year the influence grows. Can’t deny thatA truly proud moment for the Indian diaspora and something the desi community in general I.e., Pakistanis, Bangladeshiz and Afghans and all immigrant groups must support.
India’s diversity and global reach is astonishing. Trump can’t deal with this.
Indians are definitely making their mark in US politics now, every year the influence grows. Can’t deny that
In the Bible Belt, yes, there will be potential backlash as Indian and desi influence in general grows there in politics.But the hate for Indians is also growing. Indians have become the poster boys of MAGA hatred for all immigrants. A tricky time for the community who continue to remain targets of hate crimes and racial abuse. It’s not going to be easy as the West falls.
Indians should take some lessons from @Cpt. Rishwat .But the hate for Indians is also growing. Indians have become the poster boys of MAGA hatred for all immigrants. A tricky time for the community who continue to remain targets of hate crimes and racial abuse. It’s not going to be easy as the West falls.
Zohran was already catching heat from Andhbhakts just for being a Muslim instead of a Sanatani but now he has gone and roasted them completely by dropping Nehru's name.

Trump says Mamdani is a 33 years old communist who doesn't know damn things
Exactly, woke politics doesn’t work. People care about rent, feeding their kids, schooling, etc.While I have not supported the views of Mamdani on government grocery stores, free bus rides or defunding the police, he is less of a racist than the typical MAGA folks which is needed for the more diverse NY diaspora. Its a democracy and people have the right to chose and Trump and his team should stop the antics and deal with it.
And Mamdani is far better than the Somali contestants who speak nothing but anti-trump. Mamdani addressed the burning issues in NYC such as high rents, inflation costs, crime rate etc though his views may/may not work, but those resonated with the public there.
This should be a wake up call for both Republicans and Democrats. For democrats to see that their tariffs talk and MAGA thing is not working with actual people on the ground. And for Democrats to see whats actually working - its not the LGBTQ and extreme leftists views but addressing the important ones concerning daily life. Interesting times ahead.
Zohran Mamdani will be:
— First Muslim Mayor of NY city
— First South Asian Mayor of NY
— Youngest mayor in a century
— 111th Mayor of New York city
A good post.While I have not supported the views of Mamdani on government grocery stores, free bus rides or defunding the police, he is less of a racist than the typical MAGA folks which is needed for the more diverse NY diaspora. Its a democracy and people have the right to chose and Trump and his team should stop the antics and deal with it.
And Mamdani is far better than the Somali contestants who speak nothing but anti-trump. Mamdani addressed the burning issues in NYC such as high rents, inflation costs, crime rate etc though his views may/may not work, but those resonated with the public there.
This should be a wake up call for both Republicans and Democrats. For democrats to see that their tariffs talk and MAGA thing is not working with actual people on the ground. And for Democrats to see whats actually working - its not the LGBTQ and extreme leftists views but addressing the important ones concerning daily life. Interesting times ahead.
You've captured my thoughts. I like Mamdani and he seems like a very sincere guy but it's giving me so much Obama vibes it's crazy. I was travelling a lot to the States at the time and it felt eerily like now - the good vibes, the promises, the symbolism. I was so caught up in that stuff now and felt that change was coming to the world. Even the Nobel Prize felt only mildly excessive.Exactly, woke politics doesn’t work. People care about rent, feeding their kids, schooling, etc.
I’m also skeptical with some of his policies but people are being priced out and can’t afford things in New York, supposedly the greatest city in the world so some change needs to happen. Also, the Mayor does not control all the different taxes people have to pay, as some are state taxes signed off by the Governor.
I wish Mamdani the best as a lot of people are hopeful but I have the same feeling in the back of my mind as Obama. A lot of people were hopeful when Obama won, but did he really achieve much? Also, politicians over promise and under deliver.
Do Indian Americans see him as one of their own?Congratulations to Zohran, a lot riding on this even if its a small role.
Very happy for him. Tbh, I didn't expect an openly leftist Muslim man of Indian & Ugandan descent to become mayor of New York until he won the primary. Above all, he seems like a genuinely good person who really wants to do what's best for the citizens of New York. He is definitely a gifted communicator, who knows how to connect with average people. And I think that played a big part in his message resonating with so many New Yorkers.
At the same time though, I feel him getting elected will push the US closer to a cultural Civil War which I believe has already started. All the values and ideals he represents stand in stark contrast to the values and ideals of white America; whether it's the billionaires who benefit from crony capitalism or the racist/white supremacist MAGA base who see America as a white, Christian country.
NYC public education system is one of the worst in the country. Not talking about Ivy league schools in the area but basic primary and secondary education.I'd like to see what this actually means on the ground, though. It's one thing to talk a good game.
Is it even possible to lower rents in a city like NYC?
Some of the issues are the logical outcomes of 50 years of economic policies at a Federal level as well.
Interesting time in American politics.
Yes but can we agree that something needs to change as in a lot of western countries, people are being priced out.You've captured my thoughts. I like Mamdani and he seems like a very sincere guy but it's giving me so much Obama vibes it's crazy. I was travelling a lot to the States at the time and it felt eerily like now - the good vibes, the promises, the symbolism. I was so caught up in that stuff now and felt that change was coming to the world. Even the Nobel Prize felt only mildly excessive.
The much more cynical 16 year older me feels that this is a gesture at the most. A lot of empty, idealistic promises that he doesn't have the wherewithal to fund which will get eaten up in the real world. For example, a lot of his revenue raising proposals - higher taxes on corporations, higher incomes taxes on the 1% require approvals from the State and have been proven in multiple States not to work anyway. Rich guys and corporations just shift their domiciles.
They shouldn't...Do Indian Americans see him as one of their own?
He can’t be President. He wasn’t born in the US, which is a shame as like Trump he is a populist and can capture a lot of the votes across the US.He is seen as a divisive character in general with people having divided opinion, that’s why a NYC mayoral election has got this much attention even more so in the current climate under Trump . Don’t remember a NYC election getting this much hype before. Also while NYC is one of the biggest commercial cities in the world, it’s not like London which is the only tentpole city in UK. NYC mayor is not really a role that impacts day to day life of most people living in US unless you are a small business trader, businessman or blue collar in NYC. However this might prop up Mamdani as a future presidential candidate, that’s the real interesting development.
Liberals probably do , but religious ones probably are wary.. I‘m not a big fan of his policies as well but he ran a very positive campaign this time around and that was wonderful to see, his opposition had bang nothing lol.Do Indian Americans see him as one of their own?
you had a good post going until this part.He is seen as a divisive character in general with people having divided opinion, that’s why a NYC mayoral election has got this much attention even more so in the current climate under Trump . Don’t remember a NYC election getting this much hype before. Also while NYC is one of the biggest commercial cities in the world, it’s not like London which is the only tentpole city in UK. NYC mayor is not really a role that impacts day to day life of most people living in US unless you are a small business trader, businessman or blue collar in NYC. However this might prop up Mamdani as a future presidential candidate, that’s the real interesting development.
My bad I didn’t know he is not even eligible to run for president as he is not born there. Some problems take care of themselves I guessyou had a good post going until this part.
I sincerely hope its a distraction that made you type that part. I mean, seriously, has any city mayor gone onto play big role in national politics, leave alone presidency?

I have seen him use outdated Bollywood pop culture references many timesOnly thing I'll condemn about Zohran is his cringe choice of bollywood music. He ended his victory speech with 'Dhoom Machale![]()
. That’s why struggling to give me a fair chance I'm afraid a lot more economically conservative in that sense.Yes but can we agree that something needs to change as in a lot of western countries, people are being priced out.
I think New York City mayors tend to loom large because of the publicity they get. You're right that they often make an attempt for the Presidential nomination as well. Guiliani, Bloomberg, De Blasio have all tried. Mamdani won't be able to because of the native born clause.He is seen as a divisive character in general with people having divided opinion, that’s why a NYC mayoral election has got this much attention even more so in the current climate under Trump . Don’t remember a NYC election getting this much hype before. Also while NYC is one of the biggest commercial cities in the world, it’s not like London which is the only tentpole city in UK. NYC mayor is not really a role that impacts day to day life of most people living in US unless you are a small business trader, businessman or blue collar in NYC. However this might prop up Mamdani as a future presidential candidate, that’s the real interesting development.
Indian-origin Zohran Mamdani becomes the next mayor of New York City, USA.
Indian-Origin Leaders in Top American Positions:
-Satya Nadella (CEO,
Microsoft)
-Kash Patel (Nominee, FBI Director)
-Sundar Pichai (CEO, Alphabet/Google)
-Zohran Mamdani (Democratic Nominee, NYC Mayor)
-Shantanu Narayen (CEO, Adobe)
-Arvind Krishna (CEO, IBM)
-Sanjay Mehrotra (CEO, Micron Technology)
-Jayshree Ullal (CEO, Arista Networks)
-Nikesh Arora (CEO, Palo Alto Networks)
-George Kurian (CEO, NetApp)
-Vasant Narasimhan (CEO, Novartis)
-Raj Subramaniam (CEO, FedEx)
-Shailesh Jejurikar (CEO, Procter & Gamble)
-Sabih Khan (COO, Apple)
-Kamala Harris (Former US Vice President)
-Ami Bera (US Representative, CA-6)
-Ro Khanna (US Representative, CA-17)
-Raja Krishnamoorthi (US Representative, IL-8)
-Pramila Jayapal (US Representative, WA-7)
-Suhas Subramanyam (US Representative, VA-10)
-Vivek Ramaswamy (Co-Chair, Dept. of Government Efficiency)
-Harmeet Dhillon (Nominee, Asst. AG for Civil Rights)
-Jay Bhattacharya (Nominee, NIH Director)
-Sriram Krishnan (Senior White House Policy Advisor, AI)
-Jay Chaudhry (Founder & CEO, Zscaler)
-Vinod Khosla (Founder, Khosla Ventures)
-Ajay Banga (President, World Bank)
-Indra Nooyi (Former CEO, PepsiCo)
Keeping pride aside, for a minority person to move into the role of “Head of FBI” definetely needs to have a bit of a badass streak and intelligence. You would know if you got up from the couchOnly you could be proud of Kash Patel.
You should proud of what Pakistani exports - LET, JEM , Hizbul CEOOnly you could be proud of Kash Patel.

People in New York like him a lot .
You can see the Zionist crying along with their fans inc rss nutters .
This man openly said he will arrest Netanyahu and Modi is a murderer .
No Zionist is likely to win the popular vote now

I don’t expect Zohran Mamdani to be perfect, and frankly, none of us should. Perfection has never been the measure of politics. Conviction is.
What distinguishes Mamdani is not flawless policy or political polish, but a stubborn belief that government exists to serve the people, not to manage them. That public service is supposed to be an act of stewardship, not self preservation.
For too long, we’ve been ruled by leaders who confuse cruelty for strength and greed for strategy, politicians who view compassion as weakness and governance as a business plan. In that context, someone who speaks with moral clarity, who insists that dignity and justice still belong in the political vocabulary, feels almost radical.
He will not fix everything. No one will. But when an elected official chooses to fight for the people rather than against them, it does something subtle yet powerful, it restores the idea that politics can be about decency again.
Mamdani’s greatest contribution may not be any single bill or policy, but the quiet rebellion of believing that government can still be humane. And in times like these, that belief alone is a form of resistance.
That is already happening and with market forces many folks from NY have moved, this vote is from the people living in NY and they do want socialism, and democracy should ideally allow that, even if its an experimentation, luckily for US there are many major US cities for people to flock to, heck even a boring area like Texas has benefited for this very reason as folks from all these Liberal states moved their money to Texas, and DFW is now on its way to be a finance hub.I'm afraid a lot more economically conservative in that sense.
Yes governments can help to some extent but the market forces still remain the most effective to make things happen.
It's true that things are getting too expensive in the megacities - New York, London etc. The best way to address that is not to subsidise / freeze rents etc. which will only incentivise even more concentration and advantage the incumbents.
The better way is to let market forces act. Higher rents, travel costs will make it more costly to live, make talent more difficult to find and therefore make jobs and people move to less expensive locations.
Where governments can help is to encourage this and smooth out the impact of these changes. Allow competition between States and Cities to attract investment, build up infrastructure in alternate locations, provide short-term low cost housing etc.
That is already happening and with market forces many folks from NY have moved, this vote is from the people living in NY and they do want socialism, and democracy should ideally allow that, even if its an experimentation, luckily for US there are many major US cities for people to flock to, heck even a boring area like Texas has benefited for this very reason as folks from all these Liberal states moved their money to Texas, and DFW is now on its way to be a finance hub.
I agree those moves by Mamdani will hardly work going by history but right now its socialism for rich and capitalism for poor under Trump so why not socialism for both, once republicans get back to their economic roots we can mock Mamdani’s socialist policies for not the rich.
Increase of corporate tax, making it equivalent to that of Jersey.Apart from his bytes on Israel, Modi or his aunt’s hijab, can you tell me his policies or manifesto that impressed you. You wrote a lot of words so I am assuming you are familiar with his manifestoserious question.
I asked hygeinebass lolIncrease of corporate tax, making it equivalent to that of Jersey.
Yup , checks and balances!US again proved that they have the most impactful and most functioning democracy in the world.
No!Apart from his bytes on Israel, Modi or his aunt’s hijab, can you tell me his policies or manifesto that impressed you. You wrote a lot of words so I am assuming you are familiar with his manifestoserious question.
Appreciate the honesty
Honestly after being here for last decade , Vinod Khosla and Jay Chaudhry are mostly the ideal role models esp for entrepreneurial pursuits.Indian-origin Zohran Mamdani becomes the next mayor of New York City, USA.
Indian-Origin Leaders in Top American Positions:
-Satya Nadella (CEO,
Microsoft)
-Kash Patel (Nominee, FBI Director)
-Sundar Pichai (CEO, Alphabet/Google)
-Zohran Mamdani (Democratic Nominee, NYC Mayor)
-Shantanu Narayen (CEO, Adobe)
-Arvind Krishna (CEO, IBM)
-Sanjay Mehrotra (CEO, Micron Technology)
-Jayshree Ullal (CEO, Arista Networks)
-Nikesh Arora (CEO, Palo Alto Networks)
-George Kurian (CEO, NetApp)
-Vasant Narasimhan (CEO, Novartis)
-Raj Subramaniam (CEO, FedEx)
-Shailesh Jejurikar (CEO, Procter & Gamble)
-Sabih Khan (COO, Apple)
-Kamala Harris (Former US Vice President)
-Ami Bera (US Representative, CA-6)
-Ro Khanna (US Representative, CA-17)
-Raja Krishnamoorthi (US Representative, IL-8)
-Pramila Jayapal (US Representative, WA-7)
-Suhas Subramanyam (US Representative, VA-10)
-Vivek Ramaswamy (Co-Chair, Dept. of Government Efficiency)
-Harmeet Dhillon (Nominee, Asst. AG for Civil Rights)
-Jay Bhattacharya (Nominee, NIH Director)
-Sriram Krishnan (Senior White House Policy Advisor, AI)
-Jay Chaudhry (Founder & CEO, Zscaler)
-Vinod Khosla (Founder, Khosla Ventures)
-Ajay Banga (President, World Bank)
-Indra Nooyi (Former CEO, PepsiCo)
His campaign had a lot of bollywood too, his mom is Mira Nair didn’t expect him to not have the bollywood swag, even though she is anything but bollywood!Only thing I'll condemn about Zohran is his cringe choice of bollywood music. He ended his victory speech with 'Dhoom Machale![]()
You’re embarrassing yourself.Appreciate the honesty![]()
You’re embarrassing yourself.


You’re embarrassing yourself.
I'm afraid a lot more economically conservative in that sense.
Yes governments can help to some extent but the market forces still remain the most effective to make things happen.
It's true that things are getting too expensive in the megacities - New York, London etc. The best way to address that is not to subsidise / freeze rents etc. which will only incentivise even more concentration and advantage the incumbents.
The better way is to let market forces act. Higher rents, travel costs will make it more costly to live, make talent more difficult to find and therefore make jobs and people move to less expensive locations.
Where governments can help is to encourage this and smooth out the impact of these changes. Allow competition between States and Cities to attract investment, build up infrastructure in alternate locations, provide short-term low cost housing etc.
I don’t expect Zohran Mamdani to be perfect, and frankly, none of us should. Perfection has never been the measure of politics. Conviction is.
What distinguishes Mamdani is not flawless policy or political polish, but a stubborn belief that government exists to serve the people, not to manage them. That public service is supposed to be an act of stewardship, not self preservation.
For too long, we’ve been ruled by leaders who confuse cruelty for strength and greed for strategy, politicians who view compassion as weakness and governance as a business plan. In that context, someone who speaks with moral clarity, who insists that dignity and justice still belong in the political vocabulary, feels almost radical.
He will not fix everything. No one will. But when an elected official chooses to fight for the people rather than against them, it does something subtle yet powerful, it restores the idea that politics can be about decency again.
Mamdani’s greatest contribution may not be any single bill or policy, but the quiet rebellion of believing that government can still be humane. And in times like these, that belief alone is a form of resistance.
Everyone understands it but you. The polite thing would be to stop embarrassing yourself any more than you already have.how? You wrote a whole long abba dabba jabba without having 0 clue like pretty much everything you regurgitate here lol. I think apart from scoreboard copy paste legend, no one else seem to know what you are trying to say lmao.
Maybe your ilk understands the fluff you wrote. You said you don’t know someone’s political manifesto and you wrote an essay on it. I will leave it there lmaoEveryone understands it but you. The polite thing would be to stop embarrassing yourself any more than you already have.
Inspired by Frederick Joseph, I agreed with him 100%.^ This smells like a chatGPT screed
You keep digging that hole. I’m actually embarrassed for you at this point.Maybe your ilk understands the fluff you wrote. You said you don’t know someone’s political manifesto and you wrote an essay on it. I will leave it there lmao
Oh I have no problem with him trying his ideas and New Yorkers wanting them. They're the same old ones that have been proved not to work but sure go ahead.That is already happening and with market forces many folks from NY have moved, this vote is from the people living in NY and they do want socialism, and democracy should ideally allow that, even if its an experimentation, luckily for US there are many major US cities for people to flock to, heck even a boring area like Texas has benefited for this very reason as folks from all these Liberal states moved their money to Texas, and DFW is now on its way to be a finance hub.
I agree those moves by Mamdani will hardly work going by history but right now its socialism for rich and capitalism for poor under Trump so why not socialism for both, once republicans get back to their economic roots we can mock Mamdani’s socialist policies for not the rich.