New York, the imperial metropolis that loves to brag about its cosmopolitan conscience, is now staring into the abyss it helped dig in Gaza — and seeing its own reflection: complicit, cowardly, and dripping in blood money.
Zohran Mamdani, the 34-year-old democratic socialist of Ugandan-Indian descent, has done what the liberal establishment swore was impossible: he dragged Gaza’s extermination campaign into the center of a mayoral race and forced eight million New Yorkers to confront the question they’ve been dodging for a year: Are we perpetrators too?
He doesn’t hide behind the sanitized euphemisms of the donor class — “shared values,” “right to self-defense,” “tragic loss of life.” He uses the forbidden word: genocide. He names the crime and he names the criminal. If elected, he says, Benjamin Netanyahu will be arrested the moment his plane touches the runway at JFK. The city’s pension funds will divest from the companies making the bombs raining down on refugee camps. New York will stop being the silent partner in the slaughterhouse.
This isn’t utopian fantasy. It’s the modest use of municipal power against an apartheid regime that wouldn’t last a week without American subsidies and American impunity. Yet even this modest refusal is treated by the ruling elites as an existential threat.
The counterattack was immediate and total. AI-generated propaganda flooded the subways, painting Mamdani supporters as knife-wielding fanatics. Billions from billionaires — much of it from the same real estate barons jacking up “genocidal” rents at home — poured into smear campaigns. Donald Trump, that carnival grotesque, threatened to financially choke the city if it dared elect a mayor who put international law above Zionist donor lists.
Every classic imperial reflex was deployed: racial panic, red-baiting, the deliberate conflation of criticism of Israel with violence against Jews. The same liberal institutions that once marched against South African apartheid are now mobilizing to defend a regime that Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and Israeli historians describe with the exact same word Mamdani uses.
And yet the polls have him leading.
The young — Muslims, Arabs, Jews under forty, the rent-burdened, the precariously employed — have recognized in Gaza the same logic that evicts them from their apartments, surveils them, and leaves them without healthcare while trillions are shipped off to bomb children. They’re not asking for permission anymore. They’re voting with the clarity of people who have nothing left to lose.
But clarity isn’t power, and elections aren’t revolutions. A mayor can divest, boycott, declare sanctuary. He cannot, alone, stop the F-35s or the 2,000-pound bombs falling on tent camps. That requires a sustained movement willing to endure the retaliation that always follows any real challenge to imperial prerogative.
We’ve seen this script before. The liberal class elevates its radicals, applauds their courage, then watches in silence as they’re broken. Sanders folds. Ocasio-Cortez learns to speak in careful paragraphs. The Squad discovers that principles are negotiable when leadership posts and campaign checks are on the table. Moral witness is only tolerated when it stays theatrical.
Mamdani has already begun the retreat. Pressured by slogans that terrify Jewish voters rattled by real and rising antisemitism, he’s offered the obligatory reassurances and softened formulations. Necessary, perhaps, to win. Devastating if it becomes the template for governing.
The deeper betrayal, however, is structural. Even if Mamdani wins and delivers on every promise, the empire will respond as it always does: withheld federal funds, spooked markets, media demonization, lawfare. The same forces that sabotaged Allende, strangled revolutionary Grenada, and turned post-apartheid South Africa into a neoliberal shell will unleash the full fury of the national security state on one American city that dared withdraw its consent to mass murder.
That is the real lesson Gaza is teaching New York right now: the empire doesn’t negotiate with conscience. It crushes it, co-opts it, or buys it. The question is no longer whether eight million people can bear to look at what’s being done in their name. The question is whether they’re willing to pay the price of refusing to keep paying for it.
In the end, Mamdani isn’t the protagonist of this story. He’s the mirror. What New York decides to do with that reflection — smash it in rage or finally recognize itself and step away from the blood — will tell us if there’s anything left of the moral imagination that once let this country believe in its own myths.
Gaza isn’t somewhere else. It’s here — in the pension funds, in the campaign donations, in the silence of the liberal class that knows exactly what’s happening and chooses, every single day, to look the other way.
The children are still being burned alive. The ballots are being cast. The hour is late and the reckoning has arrived.

