As Mamdani skewers Americas dividers, he paints a picture of . . . HIMSELF

Zohran Mamdani, New York’s self-described socialist mayor, could not resist using the nation’s 250th anniversary celebration to trash the very country that he and his parents voluntarily sought out.As is his custom, Mamdani speaks in stereotypes and generalities, offering few if any examples, all laced with his accustomed unctuous hypocrisy.“America, they will tell you, belongs only to those with the right accent or the right shade of skin.The rest of us, they insist, should be grateful for merely being allowed to visit.
How small they are.How weak, how unoriginal.”“At every moment in our past, those who led through exclusion and isolation have tried to win power and enrich themselves by turning us against one another.”Thus spoke the pampered rich kid from Uganda, who immigrated to America with his now-endowed professor father and elite filmmaker mother.Upon arriving, the Mamdanis joined what is statistically America’s wealthiest and most highly credentialed ethnic group: the enormously privileged Indian American community.
(But how was that possible in Mamdani’s version of a racist America that supposedly detests the wrong accents and skin colors?)When this nepo baby includes himself among the supposedly “victimized” (“the rest of us”), should we laugh or cry?If Mamdani wishes to invoke the tired Marxist oppressed-oppressor binary, then by his own revolutionary vocabulary, he once belonged to a settler-colonial Indian expatriate elite: After all, although Uganda’s Indian community comprises only about one percent of the population, it still controls roughly 60 percent of the nation’s GDP.America might reasonably ask why Mamdani is so angry at the country that welcomed his family and afforded it such extraordinary opportunities.Why is he so eager to slander it as xenophobic and racist?If America is as hostile toward people of Indian ancestry as Mamdani alleges, why have some 5.4 million Indians immigrated here, making them one of the n...