Posts Tagged ‘elections’



From Trump’s era of spectacle to a socialist rebalancing — what the city’s next chapter might look like.


Why the Race Shook the Nation

This mayoral race wasn’t just about New York. It became a national battleground — because billions of dollars and elite players converged on it; because the ideological stakes felt existential. A socialist candidate threatened not just the local housing market or rent rolls, but the very architecture of a city that defines global finance, real estate, and ambition. The backers saw more than policy — they saw precedent.

That’s why so much was poured into Super-PACs, media attacks, and fear-mongering. Because if New York could pivot, what would that mean: for other cities? For national capital flows? The spectacle of New York wasn’t just local drama. It had become a battleground in a broader war over what cities — and society — are for.


New York did not crown Trump by accident. The towers, the tabloids, the myth of power — all reflected the city’s appetite for dominance, extraction, being bigger than the system itself. Trump’s triumph was less about him than the ecosystem he mirrored.

Then came Zohran Mamdani. Young. Muslim. The son of immigrants. Raised in Queens. A former foreclosure counselor turned labor organizer turned state assemblymember. Now the city’s mayor-elect. His campaign pitched housing as infrastructure, transit as a right, wages as dignity. No private jets. No tabloids. A different axis. Wikipedia+1

On November 4, 2025, New York turned. It elected Mamdani over Andrew Cuomo (independent) and Curtis Sliwa (Republican). The Associated Press called it at 9:34 p.m. ET. The city spoke: it opted not for spectacle, but for substance. Wikipedia+1


Who Is Mamdani?

Born in Kampala, Uganda, to Indian parents, transplanted to Queens at age seven. U.S. citizen since 2018. Foreclosure counselor. Labor organizer. Then elected to the State Assembly for Queens/Brooklyn (AD-36). A political upbringing rooted in justice, community, dignity—not empire, tabloid glitz, or extraction. Wikipedia


What He Ran On (And Why It Matters)

  • Rent freeze on rent-stabilized units + building genuinely affordable housing. Wikipedia+1
  • $30/hour citywide minimum wage. Wikipedia
  • Fare-free buses and expanded public transit access. Wikipedia+1
  • Universal childcare and public-run grocery provisions, funded by higher taxes on wealthy & corporations. Wikipedia+1

These are structural prescriptions. If the prior era whispered “growth at all costs,” this one asks: “What does it cost you just to live? And how do we fix it?”


The White House Meeting: A Moment of Symbolic Weight

On Nov. 21, 2025 — just weeks after Mamdani’s win — he met Trump at the White House in the Oval Office. It was their first face-to-face after months of trading insults: Trump had framed Mamdani as a “communist” and threatened to pull federal funding; Mamdani had publicly called Trump a “fascist.” PBS+2The White House+2

But when cameras turned on, the posture changed — at least publicly. The meeting was “surprisingly cordial.” Trump praised Mamdani’s victory as a sign of strength; the two discussed affordability, economic security, and public safety. Trump later remarked they “agree on a lot more than I would have thought.” Vanity Fair+2PBS+2

Media outlets instantly framed the encounter as weird, symbolic — a moment where two political opposites met quietly in the same room. Some called it surreal. Others saw it as evidence the “establishment” might tolerate — or even try to co-opt — the threat represented by a socialist mayor in the world’s financial capital. Vanity Fair+2C-SPAN+2


The Swing, Not the Rupture

This isn’t a clean break. The mechanisms — capital, real estate, media — still loom. But for a moment, elected power shifted its axis. Instead of “How do we out-shine the competition?” we heard: “How do we out-serve a city?”

Because balance isn’t static. The spectacle that defined past decades will test this administration: budgets will strain, expectations balloon, the opposition circles. If Mamdani behaves like the organizer he once was, not a brand, maybe this pendulum will settle.


The Real Test — And the Larger Narrative

Free transit costs money. A $30 wage shifts markets. A rent freeze courts legal pressure. And behind it all: can governance stay grassroots in a global city when the old order is still breathing loud and heavy?

The White House meeting — the optics, the handshake, the “we agree more than you think” line — it added a layer to the story. Not a twist. A warning. A lens. Because when the world sees a socialist mayor walking into the same Oval Office as the buttoned-down president, the question becomes: Is the message containment — or accommodation?

This isn’t about whether socialism will “save” New York. It’s about whether New York can sustain a politics of belonging — when every institution around it expects performance, not belonging.

Because when New York changes, everything else listens.

Elections change the faces—but never the outcome. Lobbyists always win.



“Now it’s just an oligarchy, with unlimited political bribery being the essence of getting the nominations for president or being elected president.”
Jimmy Carter


Every election cycle, we’re told to pick a side.

Red or blue.
Hope or fear.
Change or more of the same.

But behind the curtains and campaign ads, the same winners always emerge: the corporations who bankroll both sides.

Their lobbyists don’t need to win elections.
They just need to outlast them.

“The most offensive aspect of the modern political system is how entirely legalized the corruption is.”
Matt Taibbi


The Revolving Door Spins On

The people writing our laws?
They often come straight from the industries they’re supposed to regulate.

And when they’re done “serving the public”?
They go right back into the private sector—with a pay bump for playing ball.

This isn’t representation.
It’s a handshake deal between government and corporate power.

And it’s why regulations rarely hurt the companies they’re aimed at.
They’re often written by them.

“The reason why the U.S. government does not hold elites accountable is because they are part of the same system. It is not broken — it is designed that way.”
Glenn Greenwald


Regulatory Capture Is Not a Flaw—It’s the Design

When Big Pharma influences the FDA,
when defense contractors sit on Pentagon advisory boards,
when fossil fuel execs shape environmental policy—
that’s not corruption by accident.
It’s the system working exactly as built.

Agencies meant to protect the public
are used to protect the profits of the powerful.

And once captured, those agencies become shields—
giving the illusion of oversight while doing the opposite.

“The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum.”
Noam Chomsky


Campaign Donors Aren’t Donating—They’re Investing

In 2024, over $17 billion was spent on political campaigns.

But none of that money was a gift.
It was an investment.

And like all investors, donors expect returns:
– favorable legislation
– deregulation
– subsidies
– tax loopholes

They buy access. They buy influence.
And when necessary, they buy silence.

No matter who wins the vote, the lobby wins the outcome.


It’s Not a Bug. It’s a Business Model.

We’re taught that voting is our voice.
But what happens when the choices are pre-approved by money?

What happens when both parties answer to the same donors?
When every regulation is pre-lobbied?
When the economy is run by the few and paid for by the many?

Then we aren’t living in a democracy.
We’re living in a managed marketplace.

And the customers don’t get to write the rules.

“Elections are supposed to be an expression of will — not a demand for submission to manufactured choices.”
Edward Snowden


🩸 Truth Over Tribalism

This isn’t about red or blue.
It’s about the money that owns them both.

It’s about a system where billionaires write the laws,
corporations fund the campaigns,
and lobbyists run the show.

We don’t need new slogans.
We need new structures.
Because the lobby will keep winning—until we stop playing by their rules.


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A government of the people, by the people, for the people in a world where cash rules everything around me.

We’re getting closer to the traditional national gaslighting of people to vote for the lesser of two evils. Gaslighting and voter shaming being the only options left of a corporate captured media and government.

Keep the facade going, there’s motions to go through. There’s time slots to fill, content to create, and appearances to make.

If people can barely survive after a decade which saw both political parties have control of government at one point or another, what is the point of voting? Unless voting third party. That’s where the gaslighting and voter shaming come into play. I wonder what Jill Stein will be blamed for this election season.

What a better life? GET A JOB! So then what do I need to participate in the farce of the decaying corpse of democracy for? Don’t super delegates pick who runs in the general election anyway? Doesn’t the electoral college mean that only a few swing states decide the presidential election anyway?

If voting was so important why isn’t it a national holiday? Like it is in other countries…

Vote local? Well that’s where I can see one vote having some value. Probably why we never hear about local elections. Hard to make us hate our neighbors over referendums and country treasurer battles.

If the masses are doing worse than they were before, habitually, for generations…what good is government? What is the point of elections?

Political theater, divide and conquer, evoke emotions, distract, tribalism…

How else can the 1% get the 99% to hate each other?

Red hates Blue

Blue hates Red

Elephant hates Donkey

Donkey hates Elephant

Blue Collar hates White Collar

White Collar hates Blue Collar

North hates South

South hates North

Half the country hates the other half

What a shame, what a waste, what a farce…

In America, we don’t have a democracy, we have economic totalitarianism.

One must pay attention, and do just a baseline level of research to find this truth although it becomes more obvious every year. The economic elites find less and less need to hide it. It’s becoming more common to say the quiet part out loud, in the open, on live mics on livestreams.

Keep the masses running the rate race fueled by promises and propaganda. Coerce them to work for a living until they’re burned out, bankrupt, or dead.

Just go along to get along. Gotta make rent, gotta put the groceries on credit. Can’t attend the protest cause I’m out of PTO, can’t take my PTO cause my copay went up again, can’t afford my copay cause groceries got more expensive for the forth year in a row.

What a shame, what a waste, what a farce…

ajclogo2

by @anarchyroll
2/10/2014

Much like the politicians who are running for the elections I will be a judge for, I’m doing it for the money.

I showed up the a suburban library to get a once over of the basic information that involves being an election judge. It was given in a combination Powerpoint fueled verbal presentation, a bound packet, and an interactive dry run of our duties. It started at 10 am, not an ungodly early time of day so I went in rested and somewhere between optimistic and pessimistic.

I was clearly the only person under the age of 50 in the room. I noticed this by both sight and smell. Old man stink for days. The first half hour could have easily been confused for the senior citizen throat clearing Olympics. The guy to my left took home the gold in that regard.

However, the two very nice, very proficient women in charge of the presentation stuffed my pessimism in a sack mister. They knew what they were talking about, were not dependent on the Powerpoint slides, answered every question asked without skipping a beat, and gave us a bathroom break at the exact right moment. Kudos to you ladies.

Besides the knowledge that the state of Illinois was hiring smart, savvy, experienced people to train those at the local election level, I was impressed by the infrastructure of fail safes, paper trails, and laws to attempt to prevent voting shennanigans.  I certainly can’t speak for states with electronic voting machines from the Diebold corporation, because Illinois uses paper ballets that are first verified by two sets of eyes, then a computer, then rechecked by multiple sets of eyes before being mailed in sealed containers, before they are electronically scanned, then checked by multiple sets of eyes again to verify authenticity of individual voter and election result.

The process of checking to make sure everything on the level at a polling place in Illinois is very much like the organizational structure of a casino. We were done by 1 pm. We have the option of taking additional online proficiency exams and training, for extra pay in return for that extra work. If only the government itself had competent people like the ones I encountered today, in office. If only the government operated with a little more time efficiency and a little less old man throat clearing.  If only the agencies and social safety nets had logical infrastructure in place like ones I learned about today. If those things were so, maybe voter turnout would equal or be higher than that of American Idol.

Now, which one of you assholes stole my tumbler while I was in bathroom after class ended?