This political era is a sad Day for America, and Americans.
islam is spreading it's cancerous death 🔥 across the globe 🌎, and thanks to the clintons, obamas, bushes, bidens, and vineyard religion … it is taking a firm rooting here, in America, foisted upon American's during the obama coups:
… and the obama Jew hate/Christian hate agenda gallops forward, as very foolish and demonically motivated lost souls are so filled with hatred towards Elohim, Yeshua - and a man in the White House that they loathe for no other reason than they are fueled by lucifer; that they blind themselves to the wickedness of islam and the evil intent islam generates 😟😡😢
The rise of islam 👹💩 in America - and the subjugation of American's, especially American Jews is the the obama 😈 wet dream 😵💫 getting the demonrats off 👺💩
This is a very sad Day for America.
And very dangerous Days ahead 🙏, for Christian Americans.
Laura Ingraham - These Dems are so lost and so weak, Laura says: (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QI-z7031jow)
After NYC primary upset, anti-Israel activist Mamdani vows not to ‘abandon my beliefs’
Beating Cuomo in Democratic mayoral primary, ‘globalize the intifada’ advocate who’d arrest Netanyahu says he’ll work to ‘understand the perspectives’ of those he disagrees with
~By Luke Tress 25 June 2025, 8:28 pm
NEW YORK — New York State Assemblyman zohran mamdani, after winning a stunning upset in the city’s Democratic party mayoral primary on Tuesday night, vowed to adhere to his views on foreign affairs, while grappling with other perspectives.
mamdani is a longtime anti-Israel activist who alarmed many Jewish New Yorkers with his rhetoric and policy promises during the caustic campaign for the mayoral primary. His leading opponent, former New York governor Andrew Cuomo, had leaned into the Jewish vote and his pro-Israel bona fides throughout the campaign. The winner of the Democratic party primary typically wins the general election for mayor.
“There are millions of New Yorkers who have strong feelings about what happens overseas. I am one of them, and I will not abandon my beliefs or my commitments grounded in a demand for equality,” mamdani said at a raucous victory party in the Queens neighborhood of Long Island City after Cuomo conceded.
“You have my word to reach further to understand the perspectives of those with whom I disagree and to wrestle with those disagreements,” he said.
mamdani did not explicitly mention the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but has said that the plight of the Palestinians is central to his identity and the reason he got into politics. He is a longtime anti-Israel activist who set up his campus chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine at Bowdoin College in the 2010s and, as a state assemblyman, introduced a widely-criticized bill to strip the nonprofit status of organizations with any links to Israeli settlements and he has identified as an anti-Zionist. The day after the October 7, 2023, invasion of Israel, mamdani focused his criticism on Israel.
During the campaign, mamdani refused to acknowledge Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state; defended the phrase “globalize the intifada”; vowed to arrest Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, although he would have no legal authority to do so as mayor; and repeatedly accused Israel of genocide.
During his victory speech, he did not make any other allusions to the conflict or Jewish community, but vowed to act as mayor for all of the city’s residents.
“I will be the mayor for everyone, every New Yorker, whether you voted for me or for Governor Cuomo, or felt too disillusioned by a long-broken political system to vote at all,” he said. “I cannot promise that you will always agree with me, but I will never hide from you.”
mamdani won some Jewish support during the campaign. He won endorsements from the anti-Zionist jewish voice for peace activist group and the leftist jews for economic and racial justice (JFREJ) through that group’s electoral arm, the jewish vote.
sophie ellman-golan, a spokesperson for JFREJ, said mamdani’s pro-palestinian stance was one factor in his appeal and credited him with “opening up a new era in what is deemed acceptable within mainstream politics.”
ellman-golan credited mamdani’s focus on affordability for his broader appeal, though, including among Jewish supporters.
“There’s a fixation on, because we are Jews, we must be primarily focused on Israel,” ellman-golan told The Times of Israel on Wednesday. “This is not to say these issues don’t matter to Jews, of course they do, but we are also New Yorkers and we are dealing with the same material conditions that other New Yorkers are.”
Ahead of the vote, polls showed mamdani as the second or third-place candidate for Jewish New Yorkers. Cuomo was the favorite for Jewish New Yorkers, and New York City Comptroller brad lander, a jewish progressive, was ranked second or third.
lander, who identifies as a progressive Zionist, cross-endorsed mamdani in the race. The city’s ranked-choice voting system allows voters to select up to five candidates in order of preference. The cross-endorsement means each candidate asked their supporters to rank the other in second place, boosting both campaigns. lander won the third-most votes, according to the vote count, which tallied voters’ first-choice candidates.
mamdani has acknowledged the problem of antisemitism in New York City, where Jews are targeted in hate crimes more than all other groups combined, vowed to represent Jewish New Yorkers, and released his own plans for combating antisemitism and hate crimes.
The winner of the democratic party primary typically wins the general election in the mostly democratic city that is home to the largest Jewish community outside of Israel. The general election is scheduled for November. Cuomo and New York City Mayor Eric Adams, both centrist supporters of Israel, have registered to run in that race as independents.
If he wins the general election, mamdani, 33, will become the city’s first muslim mayor.
“We are not going to let anyone divide muslim New Yorkers and Jewish New Yorkers,” lander said on Tuesday night.
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mamdani laments criticism following his ‘globalize the intifada’ comments
~Jerusalem Post/Diaspora/Antisemitism
ByGRACE GILSON/JTA
JUNE 19, 2025 04:00
The US Holocaust Memorial Museum appeared to condemn a statement made by NYC mayoral candidate zohran mamdani in which he defended the phrase “Globalize the intifada,” saying the word “intifada” had been used in translations by the museum.
mamdani, meanwhile, responded to the accusations of antisemitism he has received since the statement in a tearful address Wednesday, telling reporters, “It pains me to be called an antisemite.”
While speaking on “The Bulwark” Tuesday, mamdani defended the phrase “globalize the intifada,” which has been used by pro-palestinian protesters and seen by many as a call for violence against Jews, telling the hosts that the phrase was often misunderstood.
“I think what’s difficult also is that the very word has been used by the Holocaust Museum when translating the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising into Arabic, because it’s a word that means struggle,” said mamdani, who has a long record of pro-palestinian activism. “And as a muslim man who grew up post-9/11, I’m all too familiar in the way in which Arabic words can be twisted, can be distorted, can be used to justify any kind of meaning.”
In a post on X Wednesday, the US Holocaust Memorial Museum decried the comparison of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, a major Jewish uprising against the Nazis in 1943, with the phrase, though it did not explicitly mention mamdani.
“Exploiting the Museum and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising to sanitize ‘globalize the intifada’ is outrageous and especially offensive to survivors,” the post read. “Since 1987, Jews have been attacked and murdered under its banner. All leaders must condemn its use and the abuse of history.”
mamdani’s statements appeared to reference an Arabic translation of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising that was used on the museum’s website up until May 2024, according to archived web pages found on the WayBack Machine.
Until that time, the Arabic translation on the website’s page for the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising translated “uprising” to “انتفاضة,” the Arabic word for intifada. It was then changed to “مقاومة,” or “muqawama,” the Arabic word for “resistance.”
The US Holocaust Memorial Museum did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the translation change.
mamdani addressed the accusations of antisemitism that he has faced following his statements in an emotional press conference Wednesday morning in Harlem, where he was repeatedly asked to respond to the accusations by reporters.
“It pains me to be called an antisemite. It pains me to be painted as if I am somehow in opposition to the very Jewish New Yorkers that I know and love and that are such a key part of the city,” mamdani said.
mamdani then went on to tell reporters about threats to his life he has faced as the first muslim mayoral candidate, becoming visibly emotional and pausing his statements to compose himself before continuing.
“I get messages that say the only good muslim is a dead muslim. I get threats on my life,” said mamdani, who then paused to compose himself as his voice broke. “On the people that I love, and I try not to talk about it, because the function of racism, as Toni Morrison said, is distraction.”
“The thing that’s made me proudest in this campaign is that the strength of our movement is built on our ability to have built something across Jewish and muslim workers, across New Yorkers of all faiths and all backgrounds and all boroughs,” he said.
“And antisemitism is such a real issue in the city, and it has been hard to see it weaponized by candidates who do not seem to have any sincere interest in tackling it but rather in using it as a pretext to make political points.”
Calls for Mamdani to apologize
Some New York Jewish leaders have decried mamdani’s statements, calling on him to apologize for equating the word “intifada” with the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.
The UJA-Federation of New York said in a post on Instagram that “any attempt to sanitize the phrase is outrageous.”
“Let’s be clear: ‘Globalize the intifada’ is not a call for justice. It is a call for antisemitic violence. Here in New York, it is linked to some of the most dangerous attacks and threats against Jewish students,” the post read.
“Any attempt to sanitize the phrase is outrageous and especially offensive to Holocaust survivors who understand better than most what happens when we ignore the weaponization of rhetoric to validate violence. All leaders, at a moment of deepening danger for the Jewish community, must condemn both this language and the abuse of history it represents,” the post continued.
Rabbi Marc Schneier, the senior rabbi of The Hampton Synagogue, also called on mamdani to apologize to New York City’s Jewish community for his defense of the phrase.
“zohran mamdani must immediately apologize to New York City’s Jewish community for his offensive claim, in which he equates ‘intifada’ with the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising,” said Schneier in a statement.
“His language is a direct insult to survivors and the hundreds of thousands of Jewish New Yorkers who are the relatives of loved ones lost in the Shoah. His moral laryngitis in the face of Iranian attacks on Israeli civilians further exposes his indifference to Jewish suffering and disqualifies him from any leadership role in this city,” the statement continued.
In an interview on MSNBC’s Morning Joe Wednesday morning, Elisha Wiesel, the chairman of the Elie Wiesel Foundation and son of Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, also decried mamdani’s defense of the phrase.
“American Jews are already in danger. We have a mayoral candidate on the ballot who refuses to condemn the phrase, you know, globalize the Intifada, which is code-switching for kill the Jews. So you have zohran mamdani running for office. The war is here. It’s not something fictional and far away,” said Wiesel.
Wiesel also called on New Yorkers to block mamdani from being elected in a post on X.
mamdani is currently polling second in an 11-way contest for the democratic mayoral primary on Tuesday. The frontrunner, former Gov. Andrew Cuomo, also decried his comments, saying in a post on X Wednesday that mamdani’s statement is “not only wrong — it is dangerous.”
“At a time when we are seeing antisemitism on the rise and in fact witnessing once again violence against Jews resulting in their deaths in Washington DC or their burning in Denver – we know all too well that words matter. They fuel hate. They fuel murder,” the post read.
“As the US Holocaust Museum so aptly said, all leaders or those running for office must condemn the use of this battle cry. There are no two sides here,” the post continued. “There is nothing complicated about what this means. I call on all candidates running for mayor to join together to denounce mr. mamdani’s comments because hate has no place in New York.”