Zohran Mamdani hadn’t even been New York City mayor for a week before WorldNetDaily insisted there was a “scandal” happening in his administration. Bob Unruh wrote in a Jan. 7 article — starting, of course, with a lecture:
When “Democrat socialist” Zohran Mamdani was elected mayor of New York City, his leanings toward communism were cited as a possible problem.
Now they’ve started.
He’s being warned that anti-white discrimination is illegal in America and the federal government is watching.
It’s because of the historic anti-white agenda expressed by one of his appointees, Cea Weaver, his chosen “tenant advocate.”
Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon was the official with the warning for Mamdani.
Her message: Don’t even think about it.
It wasn’t until the seventh paragraph of his article that he got around to the situation at hand:
A report at the Washington Examiner said “tenant advocate” Cea Weaver has insisted “white families” now will have to have a “different relationship to property.”
Her comment was, “I think the reality is that for centuries we really treated property as an individualized good and not a collective good, and we are … transitioning to treating it as a collective good towards a model of shared equity.”
As usual, Unruh refused to give Weaver a chance to respond.
Meanwhile, Larry Elder had his own Mamdani meltdown in his Jan. 15 column:
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, in his inaugural address, said, “We will replace the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism.”
That sentence captures the essence of socialism: the belief that it is simply unfair that some have more than others. To rectify this, Mamdani proposes taking from those he deems undeserving and giving to those he deems deserving. In other words, life is not only unfair but it’s government’s job to make it fair – not by guaranteeing equal rights but by promising equal results.
Think tanks on the left, such as the Brookings Institution, and on the right, such as the American Enterprise Institute, pretty much agree on the formula to escape poverty: finish high school, get married before having a child, get a job and keep it until you find another or until you start a business. I would add, avoid the criminal justice system.
[…]Mamdani’s declaration displays a childlike failure by someone raised in affluence to understand or accept why some have more than others. The vast majority of “the rich” achieved that status through hard work consistently applied over a long period of time. Boring, but true.
Esxcept, you know, the rich people who achieved that status via inheritance.
Like the rest of the ConWeb, WND has regular Mamdani meltdowns.