Twenty-four years after 9/11, New York City elected a 34-year-old whose biography reads like a Marxist coming-of-age novel with a Brooklyn rewrite. Zohran Mamdani, Muslim, activist, and self-described democrat-socialist, will become mayor January 1, 2026, in a city where the ideological spectrum stretches from hedge fund libertarians to abolish landlords.
Mamdaniโs father, Mahmood, is a professor at Columbia University with a communist lens so thick it requires a prescription.ย His mother, Mira Nair, is a filmmaker and an anti-Israeli activist in a city that is nearly 15% Jewish, and the politics of Israel are not just foreign policy; they are dinner table discourse, donor strategy, and district electoral math.
COVID-19 did what no mayoral candidate dared: paid people for not working, cleared the streets and made two gallons of gas cheaper than an 8oz. bottled water on the Staten Island Ferry. If it promised to lower taxes, COVID would be mayor.
No sane individual would have imagined New Yorkers electing a communist Islamic mayor. Republicans missed all the red flags โ again. But when the hammer and sickle flies over City Hall, itโs past time to take notes.
In a 2020 tweet, Mamdani declared: โTaxation isnโt theft. Capitalism is.โ More recently, he reignited debate by stating, โI donโt think that we should have billionaires because, frankly, it is so much money in a moment of such inequality.โ
Such a credo isnโt new with the left, but Mamdaniโs timing is telling and a political provocation.
Campaigns love a villain, and โtax the richโ and โpay your fair shareโ polls better than โspending reformโ and โbalanced budgets.โ It is the tax codeโs version of โthoughts and prayersโโ comforting, vaguely righteous and nebulous.
This is less about math and more about emotion.
It is a revenue play aimed at the cityโs top earners.
Mamdaniโs proposed two-point hike on million-dollar earners doesnโt just raise the marginal rate from 3.8% to 5.8%.ย Itโs a 51.5% increase that to the left spells: โjustice.โย Never does anyone discuss spending levels โ ever.
When the figures fail to add up, but the slogans do, itโs pure propaganda.
In Democrat-governed cities, everything is free provided you can run fast enough.
The left in New York isnโt just marching; they want to legislate without a syllabus.
Democrat lawmakers, especially in high-cost cities, test top earnersโ patience and zip codes believing that more taxes for mass transit, failing public schools and potholed roadways that double as baptismal fonts for their Teslaโs is business as usual.
The left fails to comprehend how the wealthy drive innovation, philanthropy and job creation. Entrepreneurs earn their keepย by producing what people want whileย making life better.ย Attacking the wealthy hurts everyone.ย Like everyone else, they have every right to keep what they have earned or inherited.
In the theater of taxation, โtaxing the richโ is the opening number, while the encore is a moving van heading south. In millionaire calculus it equals a call to your CPA, and in real estate terms itโs a boon for brokers and Florida condo developers.
Contrary to the arguments of many who want to raise taxes, economists have proven that the tax code is quite progressive.ย Regarding federal taxes in 2024, the top one percent paid 45.8% of all taxes, while the bottom 50% paid just 2.3%.
The politics of โtax the richโ only stokes avarice, jealousy, and class envy.
This dogma is a wrecking ball aimed at the cityโs economic engine, stripping New Yorkers of the entrepreneurial grit that built the Big Apple.
Private business fuels prosperity by creating and sustaining jobs, but its lifeblood has always been the entrepreneurs. These bold innovators built America, from the Mayflower to modern tech giants, by daring to invest, create, and push boundaries. Unlike risk-averse government bureaucracies, they embrace risk driving progress. Our freedom and economic strength exist because of them and if we forget that, we jeopardize the very engine of growth.
History will remind us harshly that envy will dismantle the very foundation of American prosperity.
Often misattributed to Lincoln, a minister warned more than 150 years ago: You canโt help the poor by destroying the rich, lift workers by crushing employers, stay solvent by overspending, or unite people by fueling class hatred.
His words still resonate.







