In 2023, Mohammed made its appearance
on the list of the top 10 most popular names for boys in New York City.
Anyone paying attention to this seemingly minor statistic could have
predicted the emergence of Zohran Mamdani as the Democrat nominee in the
upcoming mayoral election.
Mohammed had appeared as the sixth
most common baby among ‘Asians’ in New York City in 2013. By 2017, the
name of the genocidal warlord of Islam had become the most common baby
name among ‘Asians’ in the city. The rapid growth showed the power of
demographics.
Nearly 300 Mohammeds (under various spellings) were
born in New York City in 2021 accompanied by over 150 Ahmeds, and
dozens of Alis, Omars, Adnans and many others.
The Muslim
population of New York City is still undetermined. While Islamist groups
claim that there are over 1 million Muslims, they tend to exaggerate to
build up their influence, but a Pew survey estimated Muslim settlers as
making up 3% of the population of New York City.
Mamdani only won the votes of 5% of the population
of New York City. That’s within 2% of the estimated Muslim population
of the city. Whatever the actual size of the Muslim population of the
city may be, it was more than enough to make the difference in a mayoral
primary that few New Yorkers bothered to vote in because they found all
the candidates repugnant even while mosques successfully turned out the
bloc vote to rig an election for their candidate.
Mamdani was
not a popular candidate, but he toured the city’s mosques and told the
members of one Hamas-supporting mosque that this is “an opportunity — to
tell the world that Muslims don’t just belong in New York City but that
we belong in City Hall.”
That message, delivered in a mosque, combined tribal nationalism and Islamism.
How
many mosques are there in the city? There were 285 in 2015. Some
current estimates place the number at over 500 now. While Islamist
groups do build mosques that they don’t need and can’t fill in order to
build up influence with projects like the Ground Zero Mosque and other
mosques in Manhattan (which unlike Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx, does
not have a significant Muslim population below 125th Street) they
reflect a growing Muslim population.
The vast majority of that
growth happened after 9/11. The old Arab Muslim population which cheered
on the rooftops after the September 11 attacks and was responsible for
pre 9/11 terrorist attacks like the World Trade Center bombing mainly
lived in New Jersey and parts of Brooklyn are a minority now with the
massive influx of Pakistanis, Bangladeshis and other Muslims from the
vicinity of India colonizing the city.
One of the most important
things to understand about Zohran Mamdani is that he isn’t just a
Muslim, but he’s an Indian Muslim. His rise reflects the growing numbers
of Pakistanis, Bangladeshis and Indian Muslims who have taken over
entire neighborhoods in the city.
There are an estimated 100,000
Bangladeshis occupying parts of New York City. From around 35,000 in
2010, the colonizing population rapidly increased, taking over parts of
Queens, once home to middle class Greek, Italian and Jewish populations,
but now Mamdani territory.
The Queens district that Mamdani used
as a springboard to seize power in New York had formerly been held by
Aravella Simotas, a fairly typical representative of the next generation
of old school Democrats, before being ousted by Mamdani using Muslim
bloc votes.
On paper, both Simotas, a child of a Greek-American
family who had lived in Africa, and Mamdani, the son of Indian Muslims
also out of Africa, were both young ‘progressive’ Democrats who had all
the right left-wing positions. Mamdani was backed by the Democratic
Socialists of America while Simotas was backed by the Queens Democratic
Party.
There was virtually no difference between their actual
positions forcing Mamdani to adopt increasingly insane leftist positions
that are now coming back to haunt him to stand out..
“I’ve worked with Aravella, and I’m not quite sure how you could be more left-leaning than she is,” a councilwoman said.
Simotas
had lived her whole life in Queens while Mamdani, who had been living
in Manhattan, wasn’t even from Queens but had moved there for the
election. Why Queens? According to Mamdani, he moved to the area because
he liked the Muslim population already there.
Mamdani had moved into Queens to run in a Muslim district against a fellow leftist Dem.
The
2020 Democrat primary came down to a narrow victory for Mamdani at
51.20% over 48.62% by a margin of around 400 votes. That began Mamdani’s
career in politics.
Mamdani’s victory was part of a larger pattern.
Even
while Mamdani used Muslim votes to seize control of District 36, ‘Mary’
Jobaida, a Bangladeshi Muslim immigrant, tried to take control of
Assembly District 37 also in Queens. Jobaida, like Mamdani, ran on a
hard left social justice platform, but still lost. She now wants to run
for Mamdani’s seat if he takes over City Hall.
In Assembly
District 24, David Weprin, who is Jewish, has been the target of
repeated Muslim candidates running on leftist platforms including
Misbaah Mahmood, Mahfuzul Islam and Mahtab Khan: an anti-Israel Islamic
activist running on the slogan “Tax the Rich”.
Mamdani’s rise reflects a larger Islamic campaign in President Trump and David Horowitz’s former neighborhood.
In 2019, I warned that Queens was becoming ‘Queensistan”
after describing the rise of Islamic terrorism and colonization in the
borough. “Grand Central Parkway, where Awais Chudhary, the latest
Islamic terrorist operating out of Queens, planned to drop bombs on
passing cars, passes a few blocks from President Trump’s childhood home.
There are 5 Islamic centers within a little over a mile of where Trump
had grown up.” Now Queenistan has given us Mamdani.
And that’s
not the end. Mamdani is a symptom of a larger crisis. Demographics is
destiny and Muslim mass migration is proving a much greater threat to
New York City than hijacked airplanes.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine. Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation. Thank you for reading.
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