Let’s not sugarcoat what happened on the Fourth of July in New York City. While millions of Americans were grilling out, watching fireworks, and celebrating 250 years of the greatest nation in human history, the racist commie New York City just elected as its mayor stood behind George Washington’s desk — George Washington’s desk — and delivered a socialist grievance manifesto attacking the very country that gave him everything he has.
The audacity is almost too staggering to process. Not almost. It is.
Zohran Mamdani, the self-described democratic socialist who somehow convinced enough New Yorkers to hand him the keys to the nation’s largest city, used America’s most patriotic day to lecture the country about its failures, attack capitalism, accuse the wealthy of buying elections, and imply that American exceptionalism is nothing more than a cover story for racism and exclusion. He did all of this surrounded by newly naturalized American citizens — people who left everything behind to be here — apparently without a trace of self-awareness about the breathtaking irony of the moment.
JUST IN: NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani used America’s 250th anniversary to sharply criticize the country, accusing the U.S. of allowing children to go hungry while billionaires and “oligarchs” gain more power.
He said America’s wealth was built by working people with “calloused,… pic.twitter.com/p7Ayuza5je
— Fox News (@FoxNews) July 3, 2026
Mamdani: There is a term so often used to describe our nation and those who have shaped it: American exceptionalism.
American exceptionalism, the conventional wisdom tells us, makes our freedom a little more free, is how we dug the Erie Canal and irrigated the West, is why… pic.twitter.com/xDTizPKbGS
— Acyn (@Acyn) July 3, 2026
His speech was a masterclass in progressive ingratitude. America, in Mamdani’s telling, is not a beacon of freedom and opportunity that has lifted more people out of poverty than any system in history. It is an “arena of supremacy.” A “city of contradictions.” A place where “only a select few are allowed freedom.” The country’s founding ideals — the very principles that made it possible for a Ugandan-born socialist to become mayor of New York City — are, according to Mamdani, a rigged game designed to enrich the powerful and crush everyone else.
He attacked the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement as an “invasion” of New York. He accused ICE agents — federal law enforcement officers doing their jobs — of “terrorizing” neighborhoods. He suggested that American exceptionalism is not rooted in the American spirit, in the ingenuity and grit and sacrifice that built this country from nothing into the most powerful civilization in world history, but rather in immigration policy. That’s it. That’s his vision of America’s greatness: not what we built, not what we fought for, not what we bled for — but who we let in.
And then came the part that should be broadcast on every television in the country: Mamdani attacked the “wealthiest country in the history of the world” for letting children go to sleep hungry while billionaires accumulate more. A fine sentiment, perhaps, coming from someone who isn’t currently occupying one of the most powerful elected offices in America after a career built entirely within the political and institutional infrastructure of that same wealthy country. The system he’s condemning as rigged and corrupt is the system that just handed him the mayoralty of New York City. The capitalism he’s attacking built the desk he was standing behind.
The image alone should tell you everything. A socialist mayor who wants to fundamentally transform America, standing at the desk of the man who could have been king and walked away, delivering a speech about how this country has never lived up to its ideals — on the 250th anniversary of its founding. If you wanted to design a single moment that captured everything wrong with the modern American left, you couldn’t do better than this.
Here is what Mamdani will never say out loud, because saying it out loud would require a level of honest self-reflection that is entirely absent from his brand of politics: the system he despises is the reason he’s standing there. The capitalism he condemns created the wealth that funds the city he now runs. The American exceptionalism he mocks is the reason people from every corner of the earth — including Uganda — have spent 250 years risking everything to get here. No one is crossing the Rio Grande or drowning in the English Channel to get to Venezuela. They’re coming here. They’ve always come here. Because this place, for all its imperfections, is something the world has never seen before and may never see again.
Ron DeSantis asked the question that demanded to be asked: if America is everything Mamdani says it is, why did he stay? Why is he still here? Why is he running for office in a system he believes is fundamentally broken and corrupt? The answer, of course, is that Mamdani knows exactly how good he has it. He just needs you not to notice that while he’s busy telling you how bad you have it.
New York City elected this man. The rest of America is watching — and taking notes.


