Mamdani’s July 4th diatribe underscores how the movement’s energy comes from attacking the nation’s history, its institutions and anyone labeled “powerful,” while offering state control as the cure for every conceivable grievance. This worldview reduces politics to villains and victims, eroding the shared civic responsibility that holds a diverse nation together.
Mamdani—ever the man of the people—had no complaints about his NBA Finals accommodations. His perch at Madison Square Garden ran about $43,000 a seat. Proving socialism delivers to those in charge.
Young folks gravitate toward socialism because they have been raised on a steady diet of America’s flaws generation after generation. Socialist activists amplify that storyline with emotional certainty, turning grievance into a worldview. When this is how you are schooled, government fixes sounds less like ideology and more like rescue.
Politicos like Mamdani speak directly to party elites and media allies who reward radicalism creating the illusion that socialism is the future solution to everything. In that environment, disillusioned young voters see division not as a problem, but as a strategy.
If government is supplying your housing, food, healthcare, and every other necessity, your “choices” shrink. Once government controls what you depend on, it controls you.
When government becomes the provider, freedom becomes the price.
Socialism and communism are two sides of the same coin.
They are both based on greed, laziness and lust for power. They both follow the same path by disarming the people, while stealing and then murdering those who complain. The only variation is rapidity in which this happens.
The left’s long march has created a culture that champions socialism under the willfully ignorant assumption that it is somehow--moral.
What the younger generation fails to realize is that socialism can be voted in, but the only way to escape is to shoot your way out.
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