Six Notes on the Zohran Mamdani Miracle

How he expanded the electorate, defeated Cuomo’s money machine, and made the election about affordability rather than identity politics.

One: This just doesn’t happen most of the time in politics.

Look closely and you’ll notice two things. In the 2025 New York City Democratic mayoral primary, roughly 400,000 voters under the age of 40 turned out, compared to about 230,000 in 2021. At the same time, turnout among people over the age of 60 sagged, from 390,000 to about 360,000. A very old rule of thumb, that seniors vote at far higher rates than young people, was broken by NY state assemblyman Zohran Mamdani’s electrifying campaign for mayor. Not only that, in the two weeks prior to the registration deadline, 37,000 people signed up to vote, twelve times as many as did so four years ago. (Gift link to the New York Times article detailing these shifts.)

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What Does Mamdani Actually Believe?

I didn’t vote for Zorhan Mamdani in the Democratic primary, but neither did I vote against him. I voted for Brad Lander, and I didn’t rank Andrew Cuomo, so my vote basically was symbolic.

I like Mamdani, and I regard him as a mensch (a decent, ethical person). I also like his ideas about the city, although I don’t think they can be realized without a more radical governor. His lack of experience was one reason why I hesitated to vote for him, but my main reservation was his agenda about Israel and Palestine. I don’t know what it is.

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Q&A (Back-and-Forths with Greil Marcus on Mamdani’s Campaign)

In one of the most unremittingly grim news cycles I can remember, a rare bright spot was the failure (so far, at least) of Andrew Cuomo’s attempt at a comeback; it was a mean pleasure to watch that odious character demonstrate just how out of touch a candidate can be, from mocking Mamdani’s use of social media as a campaign tool to believing that an endorsement from Bill Clinton would help seal the deal (was Cosby unavailable?).

I’m guessing that you have your reservations about Zohran Mamdani, but does his ascension, along with that of AOC, give you any hope for a re-energization of the Democratic Party? —STEVE O’NEILL

I think there may be room for Mamdani and others like him in the Democratic Party, though to what degree he wants to be part of it—Bernie Sanders may have wanted its nomination, but he has never acted as if he were part of it—has yet to begin to play out and is to a great degree up to him.

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Today in Hamza Howidy’s Feed

Uploads from the past 24 hours at Hamza (@HowidyHamza) / X

150 people were killed by Israeli airstrikes in Gaza in the past 24 hours. Yesterday it was 118. The day before? 98 and the list goes on. Every day of this war there are dozens massacred, more wounded, entire families erased, and names turned into numbers. https://x.com/HowidyHamza/status/1940470509223006229

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HEARTBREAKING: A young boy kisses his wounded brother’s head, trying to soothe him, after the two were injured in an Israeli airstrike that struck a shelter center in Al-Zeitoun, east of Gaza City today.

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The Prime Minister of Qatar received the Tipperary Peace Prize in Ireland yesterday — for his remarkable contributions to peace, which includes: — Sending tens of millions monthly to Hamas. — Letting U.S.-sanctioned terror financiers roam free in Doha. — Running Al Jazeera, the go-to PR channel for jihadist propaganda. — Quietly channeling funds to armed Islamist groups in Syria, Libya, and Mali. — And helping destabilize half the Middle East for the past two decades.

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The Big Ugly (Or the 68% Solution)

Five years ago, voters in Oklahoma … do I need to mention, a very Republican state … voted to expand Medicaid coverage to more than 200,000 low-income Oklahomans. In doing so, they overruled their own Republican lawmakers and the vitriol and disinformation from Fox News. They set aside ideology long enough to extend a little kindness to those less fortunate.

Every recent poll demonstrates that there are still decent folk somewhere out there in the conservative world. I’m not talking about MAGA world. They are lost to decency and reason. But clearly there are many conservatives who disapprove of Trump’s Large Loathsome Legislation. They disapprove of wrenching healthcare from the neediest, so that the likes of Jeff Bezos can throw an even more obscene party at his next wedding.

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I Am Not Alone: “Are There Other Oceans Out There?”

the President asks. And what shall he name them?
Like the one Jules Verne put at the center of the Earth,
the sky above it crackling with lightning and pterodactyls.
“I know, I know!” He goes. “We have North America, and
the other one. Let’s call it Under America!” With my ear
to the sand I hear its buried heart. Our plane has
crashed somewhere in the Gobi. Why can’t I get
this man out of my head? In another dream he wrecked
a whole train formation with his giant abdomen exposed,
heavy, rubescent animal teats blocking the tracks.

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I Am Not Alone: Writing on the Balcony

The weather’s nice but my neighbor’s electric truck
is as grey & stealthy as a sharp-edged cloud. Out
he climbs in a brown top & black cargo pants,
looking somewhat military. My sunbathing toes,
propped on a bench, wiggle to him. I could make
my neighbor worship them while he’s still in his law-
enforcement drag, have us both sigh, oh yummy.

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Whisperings 2025

Azaleas are in bloom
Heavy, yet gently swaying on their fecund branches
As are white cascading lilacs
I see Amish youth touch,
Confused, could they be Wilding?
But the magnolias have fallen,
Shod rotted petals are underfoot
Their rust coloured leaves shine like polished leather in their stead
In thick, humid, almost tropical, still air

Paid landscapers shape mulch from yard to yard
Unsightly weeds, purposely plucked, removed
Occasional rabbits scamper from unknown prey
Fleeting
And a vaguely familiar face walks my way;
We met only once before.
As lawnmowers hum and shears do the clippings
“I just voted,” she whispers,

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No Dynasties (Dueling Fan Bases: Who Knew?)

I. The Road to The Conference Finals

Coach Thibs was fired yesterday.  Or was it the day before?  Or has it been weeks already?

Stunned Camus-style by Knickerbocker madman-owner James Dolan’s firing of the coach who steadfastedly guided his team to the Eastern Conference Finals, I anticipated having trouble getting interested in the Pacer-Thunder NBA Finals.

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Thirteen Ways of Looking at Blood

1. You can’t choose your relatives, they told us, but my bestie and I tried, rubbed pricked thumbs together to blend blood.

2. Early accounts portray vampires as ugly, bloated and florid from blood consumption. In modern media, they’re charismatic, sexy antiheroes.

3. Licking a cut, what child doesn’t thrill to the rich iron taste of their interior brought forth?

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Looking Backward (Reflections on the Sixties)

Notes from the Underground by Thorne Dreyer (New Journalism Project).

Have you noticed? Sixties folk—organizers, activists, pacifists, feminists and liberationists of all stripes— can’t seem to get enough of the era when they made history. For some it never really ended, though recent American history has not been kind to the Sixties. In the 1980s conservatives co-opted buzz words from the Sixties and touted “The Reagan Revolution.” These days, Trumpers have also scooped up and recycled the vocabulary of that era of protest.

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Haiti Now: Hells & Luminescence

Dear family and friends,

As we have made our way through the weeks celebrating Easter, Ascension and soon Pentecost, the sufferings in which we accompany the Haitian people are the farthest you can imagine from being joyful and consoling.

Since Lent began in March, many farmers, young and old, have been killed in their fields in Berlot (Kenscoff Mountains). A whole family was burned alive in nearby Pernier. Four members of a parish youth group were hung by their arms from the Church rafters in Carrefour Bert (Kenscoff Mountains), and one of the security agents from our orphanage was brutally killed and his body burned in Furcy.

These are terrors just from only the past few weeks, and only some of those near us. We are in our fifth year of these vicious attacks by gangs on the population, country wide. Imagine the depth of the national suffering.

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“Under Cover of the War with Iran…”

Dear Friends,

We turn to you with an urgent call for help. Our friends in Masafer Yatta—whom we’ve accompanied for years in their struggle to remain on their land—are facing imminent destruction. We need your support now.

On June 18, Israel’s Higher Planning Council for the West Bank made a devastating and arbitrary decision: to permit IDF training in the infamous Firing Zone 918. This means the total demolition of 12 villages—home to around 2,800 people—and the final stage of ethnic cleansing in Masafer Yatta.

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Dispatches from Fascist America [TACO Edition]

Where to begin? Let’s start with one area where Trump is not chickening out.

Corruption.

History has stripped of context, flipped, and then enshrined GM president Charles Wilson’s quote, “What’s good for GM is good for the country.” No need to transfigure the intention when transferred to Trump. For Trump, what is good for the family is good for the country. The White House is for sale, and the whole world knows it.

In fact, it’s to Trump’s advantage that the whole world knows it. You don’t get pimp planes if folks don’t know you can be bought.

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Prelude to the Bright and Warm

A woman, who had been abused by her father, husband and brother-in-law, tries to starve herself to death while confined to a mental hospital. A college instructor, scarred from eye-to-throat and going blind, meets a poet who has lost the ability to speak. Political protesters, who have been arrested, find themselves starved, waterboarded, beaten with rifle butts, hung from ceilings, left for ants to nibble on their genitals, reduced to pus, piss, saliva, blood, snot, shit, “lumps of rotten meat,” and rendered unable to be touched or feel affection or achieve intimacy.

These people are balding, overweight, insomniac, nightmare-afflicted, worried about the size of their penis. They are “jaundiced” and “sickly looking.” They have been shattered. When they look into mirrors, death hovers behind their face. Marriages have been brief. Children have been lost. They walk until so exhausted they can sleep without recalling their dreams. And when they dream they find themselves alone in cold, dark woods in a barn full of “great blood-red gashes of meat, blood still dripping down,” or with black-red blistered lips bursting with blood and pus, or digging into frozen ground by hand until their nails splinter and their fingers bleed, or on scorched islands surrounded by tens of thousands of dying fish, the tattered sails of wrecked ships, the scattered bones of whales and sharks.

They live in cities once pulverized into dust. They live alone in small rooms, furnished and curtained in black. Through “pitch-black windows,” they look upon “pitch-black” darkness into which they consider throwing themselves. They experience rain and woods as black. They fear being sucked into a wound’s “pitch-black maw.” They have been swallowed by darkness. They feel each moment of life is a step off a cliff. They feel like giant, invisible knives are suspended above them as they lie immobile below. They ask if going on is worth it.

They are bodies “from which all desire had been eliminated.” They are “revolted” by life.” They believe it is man’s fate “to be degraded, damaged, slaughtered.” They wonder “why it is such a bad thing to die.” They believe humans to be “fundamentally cruel,” with “brutality” “imprinted in our genetic code.” They believe that, like sleet, the earth will vanish and take “comfort” in the “impossibility of forever.”

These people populate the novels of Han Kang, a winner of  the International Booker Prize (2016) and Noble Prize for Literature (2024). Five have been translated into English:  The Vegetarian (published in Korean in 2007 and English in 2016); Greek Lessons (2011/2023) Human Acts (2014/2016); White Book (2016/2019); We Do Not Part (2021/2025).

I read them all, periodically interrupting my reading to gasp.

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Deep South Korea: “Human Acts” & “Women in the Sky” (& Dylan in Deep France)

“In other words, ‘Gwangju’ had become another name for whatever is forcibly isolated, beaten down, and brutalized, for all that has been mutilated beyond repair…”[1]

Those words, voiced by a character who’s a stand-in for author Han Kang, speak to what drove Han to write Human Acts—a novel meant to be commensurate to the uprising against martial law in South Korea that led to mass murders in the city of Gwangju in May of 1980. The story, as narrated by Kang’s circle of lightly fictionalized witnesses, didn’t end during that month of death. In ensuing years, more misery was inflicted upon insurgents who survived the initial massacres. Human Acts traces their sufferings as well as the unending trauma endured by every South Korean condemned to remember what made “Gwangju” a byword for terror.

I doubted I was up to writing about Human Acts but, prodded by wind gusts on a bright Saturday that made May seem like March (and reminded me I’d been stalling), laggardly me made a start. Though I stopped to attend a Standing Together protest in Union Square. (I’m guessing Han would’ve given me dispensation.) What was blowing in the wind that weekend was amped up by news from Gaza—where bombs (I help pay for) drop on innocent Palestinians as Hamas hides in their tunnels and the hostages moulder.

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Reality of Annexation (From Today’s “Haaretz”)

The eyes of the world are on Gaza, where the war between Israel and Hamas has now dragged on for over 600 days, with no end in sight. Another attempt by the U.S. to pressure Hamas into accepting the terms of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for a temporary cease-fire appears to have failed. And, despite growing international pressure to end the war, the situation on the ground remains as hopeless as it is dire.

Meanwhile, just a few dozen kilometers east of Gaza, in the hills of the West Bank, another significant development is quietly taking shape. There, the Netanyahu government has accelerated a de facto annexation process – one that began before the October 7 attacks, continued under the guise of war and gained even more momentum following President Trump’s victory last November.

Short of a formal annexation declaration, the government is doing everything possible to signal that it intends to absorb this territory – home to more than two million Palestinians – into the State of Israel.

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“Just Tell the Story”

This letter from Erella isn’t dated, which seems apt, since it speaks to the relentless essence of the occupation…

Dear friends,

For sixteen years I have walked at Nasser’s side. He was 20 years-old when we first met. His youthful dream was to become a vet. Luckily, he didn’t manage to fulfill his dream, otherwise how could he have grown up to document everyday injustices as a B’Tselem employee and still manage to remain connected to himself?

Early last week, we had our usual “how are you?” phone call. Nasser told me that he’d had a week full of demolitions at the various locations for which he was responsible. After a moment’s silence, he said: “What most frightens me is that I will get used to it.”

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