


He Won the Primary. That’s the Real Election in Queens.
While most Americans are busy trying to survive inflation, crime, or censorship, a new kind of candidate just clinched victory in New York’s 36th District primary, and it should terrify anyone who still believes in constitutional liberty.
Zohran Mamdani didn’t win a debate. He won control of the ballot.
And in a deep-blue district like Queens, that’s not just momentum, it’s practically a coronation.
Meet Zohran Mamdani: The Prototype Candidate for America’s Downfall
He dresses up like your average progressive, throwing around slogans like “abolish ICE,” “free Palestine,” and “defund the police.” But beneath the buzzwords is a two-headed agenda: Marxist revolution dressed in Islamic grievance politics. Engineered. Funded. And now, alidated by a win.
Who Is Zohran Mamdani?
He was born in Kampala, Uganda, and raised in New York, where he was elected to the New York State Assembly in 2020, representing District 36, which covers Astoria, Queens.
He is the son of Mira Nair, an internationally acclaimed Indian filmmaker whose body of work is widely celebrated in academic and artistic circles for its exploration of postcolonial identity, diaspora tensions, and progressive social themes. Her films—including Mississippi Masala, Monsoon Wedding, and The Namesake—often challenge Western norms, elevate marginalized voices, and center narratives of cultural hybridity and resistance. Though not overtly Islamic in doctrine, Nair’s storytelling frequently overlaps with Islamic cultural contexts and promotes themes of anti-colonial struggle, global inequality, and Western culpability—especially in Africa, India, and the Muslim world.
His father, Mahmood Mamdani, is a Marxist political theorist born in India and raised in Uganda. A longtime professor at Columbia University, he has spent decades building a global academic reputation through critical studies of colonialism, race, and state power, particularly in Africa and the Middle East. Mamdani is a prominent voice in pushing the concept of “imperial Islamophobia”—a theory that frames global counterterrorism efforts, secular governance, and Western critiques of Islam as modern forms of colonial repression. In his view, terrorism is not an ideological threat, but a political byproduct of Western oppression. Sharia-based regimes, by contrast, are reframed not as authoritarian, but as “culturally sovereign.”
Together, Mira Nair and Mahmood Mamdani represent more than just artistic and academic success. They represent a worldview—a lens that fuses cultural grievance, academic Marxism, and postcolonial resistance into a political identity that views the West not as a civilizational force, but as a system to deconstruct.
So, what did Zohran inherit?
The perfect storm.
Red and Green: The Fusion That Built Him
Zohran Mamdani is not simply a progressive politician. He is the product of a deliberate ideological synthesis, where Marxist political revolution meets Islamic cultural identity, shaped into an electoral strategy.
His political base is the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA)—an organization that openly advocates for the dismantling of capitalism, supports the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) campaign against Israel, and has endorsed slogans such as “abolish ICE” and “defund the police.” Mamdani joined DSA publicly and was one of several members elected in New York under the group’s 2020 electoral project, designed to shift American legislative bodies further left using democratic means.
On the cultural and religious front, Mamdani publicly identifies as a Shia Muslim. He has celebrated Ramadan publicly, using the occasion not for personal reflection or unity, but to promote a pro-Palestinian political narrative.

He made religious references during public remarks and has positioned himself as a voice for Muslim constituents. However, his engagement with religion appears selectively political: he has remained publicly silent on theocratic abuses by Islamic regimes—including Iran, Qatar, and the Palestinian Authority—while simultaneously criticizing Western nations for “Islamophobia” and colonialism.
This dual allegiance—Marxist economics and Islamic grievance framing—has placed Mamdani at the center of what scholars and analysts have increasingly called the Red-Green Axis: an informal but growing alliance between far-left political actors and Islamist organizations or sympathizers, united by a common opposition to Western structures, capitalism, and the state of Israel.
“I fight for a world where we are no longer complicit in apartheid.”
– Zohran Mamdani, NY Assembly floor, 2023
Mamdani is not a passive supporter of BDS. He has sponsored and promoted legislation encouraging New York State to divest public funds from companies connected to Israel. He has consistently referred to Israel as an “apartheid state” engaged in “ethnic cleansing”—language lifted directly from Hamas-adjacent advocacy groups and echoed by CAIR and other Islamist-aligned institutions.
Domestically, he supports abolishing the NYPD, has advocated for “community-based alternatives to policing,” and has called for housing and economic policy to be governed by “the principles of decolonization”—a framework rooted in anti-Western theory developed by postcolonial Marxist writers like Frantz Fanon and Edward Said.
In Mamdani’s worldview, nearly every institution in America is tainted by racism, capitalism, or imperialism. What he offers is not reform. It’s replacement. And his growing popularity among youth voters suggests that the fusion he represents is no longer fringe—it’s fast becoming the foundation of a new political orthodoxy.
But ideology alone doesn’t win elections.
Mamdani’s rise was engineered by a system of allies, donors, and activists who knew precisely what they were building.
Allies, Donors, and the Agenda
Zohran Mamdani didn’t rise from Queens on charisma. He was lifted by money, media, and a machine built to install ideologues—not public servants.
Behind the “community organizer” act is a pipeline. A political apparatus that grooms candidates like Mamdani to smuggle Marxist-Islamist ideology into American institutions under the banner of democracy.
The Network That Built Him
His launchpad was the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA)—the same group that:
The DSA didn’t just endorse Mamdani—they built him. They ran his field ops, crafted his messaging, and cast his campaign as part of their strategy to mainstream socialism through identity politics. He’s not just a member—he’s the mold.
Then came the endorsements:
And orbiting all of it was the Ceasefire Now Coalition—a patchwork of BDS organizers, Hamas apologists, and pro-Palestinian front groups.
Mamdani didn’t just support them. He led them:
The Donors: Out-of-State, Off-Message, and Off-Limits
Mamdani’s campaign hauled in over $8 million, but the “grassroots Queens guy” story falls apart fast.
When caught? He issued the usual non-apology: a vague promise to “review” the donations and maybe issue refunds.
And who helped mobilize the Muslim vote?
Linda Sarsour—the Sharia-defending, Hamas-flirting activist who’s been banned from multiple feminist events for being too extreme. She promoted Mamdani as if he were her own campaign.
Every successful operation needs outside validation. These weren’t endorsements—they were clearances. Each one gave Mamdani more air cover, more credibility, and more fuel.
Key Endorsements: The Red-Green Rolodex
Every name on Mamdani’s endorsement list is a node in the Red-Green political syndicate:
This wasn’t a campaign. It was a coalition trial run—designed to prove that if you mix DSA slogans, Islamic grievance politics, and anti-Israel rage, you can raise millions, go viral, and walk into public office without ever answering a real question.
And now, it’s not theory anymore.
It worked.
The general election is coming. But in a district as deep-blue as Queens, that may be a formality. The primary was the real contest, and Mamdani’s win all but guarantees he’s headed back to Albany, with even more influence, more donors, and more momentum to take this model nationwide.
The Palestine Obsession
You’d think a New York State Assembly member’s job would be fixing rent, rooting out budget fraud, or addressing education.
Not Zohran Mamdani.
To him, Astoria is Gaza, your tax dollars are weapons of war, and legislation is just another front in a global ideological campaign.
From Lawmaker to Loudspeaker
Mamdani hasn’t merely expressed solidarity with Palestinians. He’s built his entire political persona around demonizing Israel and defending the so-called “resistance” even when that resistance is carried out with bullets, rape, and child murder.
“Every dollar we give Israel is a bullet fired into the heart of a child in Gaza.”
– Zohran Mamdani, 2023 campaign video
This isn’t humanitarian advocacy. It’s political theater. Scripted by global Islamist networks. Marketed through leftist media. And funded with your money.
The Sharia Layer
This is the part most people miss because it’s not meant to be obvious.
Politicians like Mamdani are coached to keep their religious goals implied rather than stated. But the pattern is visible:
This is intersectional jihad by legislation.
What Starts in Queens Won’t Stay There
This isn’t a local activist. This is a federal prototype.
Groomed by the DSA, funded by identity politics, shielded by media cowards afraid of being called “Islamophobic” for telling the truth.
This was never just about Zohran Mamdani.
It’s about the machine that built him. It’s about the Islamo-Marxist alliance running candidates in every major city, each of them cloaked in “equity,” but engineered for replacement.
It’s about how fast Americans—left, right, and independent—are falling for the script. Because it sounds progressive. But it’s predatory.
And the truth is simple:
He’s not here to represent Queens.
He’s here to execute the Red-Green plan: to burn America down and build their utopia on its ashes.